Answer:
In the story, Janie's sentiments about love and marriage are a running theme. Tea Cake and Janie's love and marriage are clearly shown in Chapter 13, which is filled with heartwarming passages. Janie and Tea Cake are shown to have a one-of-a-kind relationship in this chapter, and it becomes clear that Tea Cake does not merely care about Janie's money.
In this chapter, Janie comes to terms with the fact that she, too, loves Tea Cake. In the last paragraph, "Janie looks down on Tea Cake and feels a self-crushing love. So, her soul crawled out from its hiding place" (128). Janie has never been in love with anyone, and she has never felt anything like it. In the end, she realizes what genuine love is all about.
Explanation:
Teachers are smart, change some words to avoid plagiarism. :)
Answer:
it's B quiet
Explanation:
Are you using Quizlet? ah nevermind. but the answer is B
Answer: because she is in a new class
Explanation:
The answer is B because in the story the author talks about how the town is unsafe and the employees get a lot of funds but the town repairs do not. Hope this helps :) (My previous answer was deleted for lack of info)