The boys of the Socs and Greasers are both around the same age, attend the same high school, believe they are non-conformists, enjoy drive-in movies, and even appreciate the beauty of the sunset. The novel shows how the boys in the groups are similar despite their feud and social differences.
For many reasons, people blame certain characters over others. ... The first character who is to blame for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet is ... He played a role in the families hatred toward each other.
Explanation:
Q1. Paragraph is a distinct section of a piece of writing, usually dealing with a single theme and indicated by a new line.
Q2. -Descriptive paragraph
-Narrative paragraph
-Persuasive paragraph
Q3. -Descriptive paragraph
Describing a person, place, thing, animal, theme or idea.
-Narrative paragraph
Include action, events and exciting descriptive words
-Persuasive paragraph
Which the writer is actually giving his or her opinion on a certain subject or topic.
The themes of compassion and community intersect in the novel, during the part where scout comes to the court house where Atticus was and tells Atticus something and she tells the community some stuff and they don't kill the prisoner.
1. impinge = strike
The word impinge can have various meanings, but in the case above, it means to strike. When 'the rain impinge[d] upon the earth,' it means that it started raining, the rain started striking the earth. To impinge means that something starts, and usually something negative.
2. garrulous = loquacious
The word garrulous refers to someone who talks excessively, likes to talk a bit too much, and usually about something trivial. Loquacious is a fancy word to denote the same thing, although it has a more positive connotation - it refers to someone who can speak nicely.
3. pious = religious
The word pious comes from the Latin word pius, which means dutiful. So when English took this word from Latin, it added a different suffix (-ous), and gave it the meaning of being 'dutiful to God.' So nowadays, pious refers to someone who is devoutly religious.
4. ruinous = dilapidated
The word ruinous refers to something which is in ruins, which is falling apart. The word which means the same thing is dilapidated - both of these words are usually used to describe buildings that are very old, and derelict, and are practically in ruins.