Answer:
"All day he hung round the cove or upon the cliffs with a brass telescope; all evening he sat in a corner of the parlour next the fire and drank rum and water very strong."
Explanation:
Answer:
The kind and the rules before him lived in prosperity
The question was invalid to be asked in a class.
They won the war so the deaths had not been in vain.
Resisting the police was a futile attempt for the robber.
He was perceptible to the entire public at the speech.
She had to eat food as a necessity to survive.
He led a remarkably frugal lifestyle.
The prisoners' of the war were malice and dangerous.
She was conspicuous with her neon colors at the party.
He had a protruding bottom lip when he pouted.
When he turned around there was a moose by him and he had attacked him while he's in the water, and so he thought he would die.
Answer and Explanation:
In Amy Tan's short story "Rules of the Game", the conflict is mainly external, man vs. man or, more specifically, daughter vs. mother. Waverly and her mother seem incapable of understanding each other's feelings and demonstrations of such feelings. That is made very clear toward the end of the story, when the mother proudly introduces Waverly to every one, even strangers, on the street. Waverly is a sort of child prodigy, a chess genius, and her mother can't help but display her. Waverly, however, does not enjoy being exhibited, reacting in a way that is disrespectful and offensive, in her mother's opinion.