Answer: from her words on the poem " what high and mighty
hypocrites!
They claim
I’m the foul one!" She sees them as pretenders who act like they have feelings or virtues which they certainly don't have.
She also sees the God and goddess as hard-headed, and too proud to learn but she shows care and concern which the Gods do not posses, from the line "a little care and concern, but the gods are hardheaded;
they never learn."
I think the answer is that Sarah should look up words she doesn't know for chapter titles, headings and first paragraphs and write the main idea in her own words.
The difference between the language of the narration and the language of the dialogue is that (A) Twain uses regional dialect in the dialogue, which highlights the fact that he has grown and changed since he worked on the river.
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Here are the following choices after a thorough research:
A. Twain uses regional dialect in the dialogue, which highlights the fact that he has grown and changed since he worked on the river.
B. Twain uses regional dialect in the dialogue, which reinforces his embarrassment about his past job on the river.
C. Twain uses regional dialect in the narration, which illustrates his desire to return to his job on the river.
D. Twain uses regional dialect in the narration, which demonstrates that he has retained all the knowledge he learned on the river.</span>