One simile would be “shy at first like a foal,”
Marjane Satrapi's book, ''Persepolis,'' is an autobiography that details her childhood in Austria and Iran while the Islamic Revolution occurred. Explore Satrapi's portrayal of Uncle Anoosh, and analyze Anoosh's time in the Soviet Union and prison, his relationship with Marji, and his death. Anoosh's Time in the Soviet Union
Where to start with Uncle Anoosh? He's a character in Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis whose function seems to be filling in pieces of main character Marji's family history and his experiences come across to her as entertaining and heroic. He begins by telling her of his experience with Uncle Fereydoon. Fereydoon and his friends liberated the northwestern Iranian province of Azerbaijan from the influences of the Shah. Keep in mind that this is not to be confused with, at that time, the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
It's called an aside since one or only a few characters hear what a character says to another
He is not to be trusted alone because he will fall off the wagon and do things he does not want to do.
Paul, who is trying to show that the waether dictates the amount of kids swimming