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jekas [21]
3 years ago
5

What is finchs landing?​

English
1 answer:
andrezito [222]3 years ago
6 0

Answer: Finch's Landing is the ancestral home of Atticus and the Finches. It was once a plantation along the Alabama River about 20 miles from the town of Maycomb. ... Atticus and Jack Finch both leave Finch Landing to further their careers as a lawyer and a doctor respectively.

Explanation:

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Who is the narrator of the section of the story
zysi [14]

Answer:

please give me brain list and follow

Explanation:

Narrator, one who tells a story. In a work of fiction the narrator determines the story's point of view. If the narrator is a full participant in the story's action, the narrative is said to be in the first person. A story told by a narrator who is not a character in the story is a third-person narrative.

8 0
3 years ago
I’d like to get a job there because I like digging around and planting things.Which revision changes the tone of this because of
german
Change “digging around” to “to dig in dirt”. Remove “Things”
7 0
3 years ago
This article is structured in a list format. What does the article list in Thanksgiving Fact or Fiction
Lorico [155]

The article "Thanksgiving: Fact or Fiction" lists different beliefs about Thanksgiving and states whether they are fact or fiction.

Here is the list:

1. Thanksgiving is held on the final Thursday of every year.

  • Fiction. Initially this was the case, but it was changed to be the fourth Thursday in November to make the shopping season longer.

2. One of America's founding fathers thought the turkey should be the national bird of the United States.

  • Fact. Benjamin Franklin suggested this.

3. In 1863, Abraham Lincoln became the first American president to proclaim a national day of thanksgiving.

  • Fiction. Three presidents before him proclaimed a national day of thanksgiving.

4. Macy's was the first American department store to sponsor a parade in celebration of Thanksgiving.

  • Fiction. Gimbel's store had the first Thanksgiving Day parade in 1920. However, four years later Macy's had theirs and that became the tradition.

5. Turkeys are slow moving birds that lack the ability to fly.

  • Fiction (kind of). Domestic turkeys, which are eaten at Thanksgiving cannot fly, but wild ones can fly for a short time.

6. Native Americans used cranberries, now a staple of many Thanksgiving dinners, for cooking as well as medicinal purposes.

  • Fact. They were used for food, medicine, and dye.

7. The movement of the turkey inspired a ballroom dance.

  • Fact. It's called the turkey trot.

8. On Thanksgiving Day in 2007, two turkeys earned a trip to Disney World.

  • Fact. George W. Bush issued a pardon to two turkeys named May and Flower.

9. Turkey contains an amino acid that makes you sleepy.

  • Fact. However, most people likely feel sleepy from the fat and carbohydrates, or simply eating too much food.

10. The tradition of playing or watching football on Thanksgiving started with the first National Football League game on the day in 1934.

  • Fiction. The American Intercollegiate Football Association held a game in 1876.

3 0
3 years ago
The book is The Tiger Rising by Kate DiCamillo
lilavasa [31]

Answer:

Explanation:

Walking through the misty Florida woods one morning, twelve-year-old Rob Horton is stunned to encounter a tiger—a real-life, very large tiger—pacing back and forth in a cage. What’s more, on the same extraordinary day, he meets Sistine Bailey, a girl who shows her feelings as readily as Rob hides his. As they learn to trust each other, and ultimately, to be friends, Rob and Sistine prove that some things—like memories, and heartaches, and tigers—can’t be locked up forever.

Awards and Recognition

National Book Award finalist 2001

Read the Reviews

A multifaceted story with characters who will tug at readers' hearts. Rob and his father moved to Lister, Florida, to try to begin life anew without Rob's mother, who recently died from cancer. The boy goes through his days like a sleepwalker, with little or no visible emotion. “He made all his feelings go inside the suitcase; he stuffed them in tight and then sat on the suitcase and locked it shut.” His sadness permeates the story; even the weather, with its constant dreary drizzle is sad. With the arrival of a new student, Sistine Bailey, Rob's self-contained world begins to crumble. He and Sistine are both friendless and victims of the cruelty often shown outsiders at school. When the boy finds a caged tiger in the woods, he recognizes a similarity between himself and the animal. Then the sleazy owner of the motel where Rob and his dad are living gives him the responsibility of feeding the creature, and Rob realizes he finally holds in his hands the keys to freedom. Quotes from William Blake's “The Tiger” intimate themselves into the narrative and set the tone. It deals with the tough issues of death, grieving, and the great accompanying sadness, and has enough layers to embrace any reader. (School Library Journal)

DiCamillo's second novel may not be as humorous as her debut, Because of Winn-Dixie, but it is just as carefully structured, and her ear is just as finely tuned to her characters. In the first chapter, readers learn that Rob lost his mother six months ago; his father has uprooted their lives from Jacksonville to Lister, Fla.; the boy hates school; and his father's boss, Beauchamp, is keeping a caged wild tiger at Beauchamp's abandoned gas station. The author characterizes Rob by what he does not do (“Rob had a way of not-thinking about things”; “He was a pro at not-crying”), and the imprisoned tiger becomes a metaphor for the thoughts and feelings he keeps trapped inside. Two other characters, together with the tiger, act as catalyst for Rob's change: a new classmate, Sistine (“like the chapel”), who believes that her father will rescue her someday and take her back to Pennsylvania, and Willie May, a wise and compassionate woman who works as a chambermaid at Beauchamp's hotel. The author delves deeply into the psyches of her cast with carefully choreographed scenes, opting for the economy of poetry over elaborate prose. The climax is sudden and brief, mimicking the surge of emotion that overtakes Rob, who can finally embrace life rather than negate it. DiCamillo demonstrates her versatility by treating themes similar to those of her first novel with a completely different approach. Readers will eagerly anticipate her next work. (Publishers Weekly)

5 0
3 years ago
The correct meaning for the italicized root. eolithic
Stells [14]
  E·o·lith·icdesignating or of the earliest period of the Stone Age, during which crude stone tools were first used
5 0
3 years ago
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