Answer: Laughing Boy
Explanation: a 1929 novel by Oliver La Farge about the struggles of the Navajo in Southwestern United States to reconcile their culture with that of the United States. It won the Pulitzer Prize in 1930. It was adapted as a film of the same name, released in 1934.
Answer:
B. second person
Explanation:
Second person includes you, he, she, they,
<span>This excerpt is lonely and mysterious. It is lonely because it sounds like the one speaking is locking their soul or internal feelings into a place of their own, a place of solitude. The mystery comes in because one must slow down and explore their own heart and thoughts. What exactly is it we are looking for inside ourselves?</span>
Answers with Explanations:
1. Compare the monster's interactions with the little girl in paragraph 19 and the little boy in paragraphs 25-32.
The question above is related to the story about "Frankenstein."
"Paragraph 19" shows<u> how curious the monster was</u> when he saw the <em>little girl.</em> At this time, the monster was feeling a sense of joy on his journey. Hearing the girl's voice made him<em> a little shy</em> that's why he hid. It also showed his heroic side when he tried to save the girl when she fell into the stream. <em>This shows his human side</em> that somehow<em> he felt empathy for the girl.</em>
"Paragraphs 25-32" also shows the<u> monster's curiosity.</u> This time, he was curious about the little boy, who was the child brother of "Victor Frankenstein." At this time, the monster was feeling unhappy and fatigued. When he saw the boy, his immediate monster instinct overpowered him. Though he wanted the boy to be his friend, the boy called him an<em> "Ugly wretch."</em> This angered him, that's why he killed him.
2. How do these scenes' similarities and difference develop the monster's characterization?
Both of the scenes show the curiosity of the monster while he was<u> hiding among the fields.</u> The feelings of the monster during the time of encountering the girl and the boy reflects how he treated them. He was <em>happy when he saw the girl,</em> on the contrary, <em>he was fatigued and unhappy when he saw the boy</em>. It shows how his character of having empathy on the girl can quickly change into overpowering monster when he saw the boy.
Making mistakes is both good and bad. I believe that the mistakes you made in the past, shape who you will be in the future. I believe that we learn from our mistakes, and grow from them, too. I don't believe all mistakes are bad. Somewhere along the way, someone would have had to make a mistake that shaped our lives for the best. Take chocolate chunk cookies for example: There was a woman making chocolate chip cookies but she made a mistake and cut the chocolate pieces too big. She gave them out to everybody... turns out, she made what we now know as delicious chocolate chunk cookies! Making mistakes is a part of us. We will always make mistakes, but it is in the eye of the beholder what you make of those mistakes. You can either learn from them and grow, and make the best of your future, or you can sit in a room and sulk about how you messed up. There is no problem too big, that there will not be a solution. There will always be a solution, it's just up to you to find it or not, problems will always be just temporary. I mean, take this for example: think back to a time in your life when you were facing a problem and you thought it was never going to end. Well, let me tell you it did end, or it will end soon. There is not one human being on Earth who will not make a mistake in their life. From something as small as spelling a word wrong, to making the wrong decision when it comes to marriage. I believe that we all have second chances, too. We all have the chance to make up for a mistake we made in the past, are making right now, or will make in the future. If you ever feel like you are so deep into then hole of despair, just look up to God, and he will comfort you. Mistakes are what shape us, and we should appreciate our mistakes.