Answer:
"Now, by the gods, I drove my big hand spike deep in the embers, charring it again, and cheered my men along with the battle talk to keep their courage up: no quitting now."
hope this helps
plz mark brainliest
I would say do a story of a teen or a child getting in trouble like they ditch school or if you did a child say a teacher was calling on good/bad behavior.
I have know idea what the Spanish says, but tbh I prefer coffee. :P
D.J. MacHale's purpose after writing the book Sylo Chronicles is that people should not succumb to peer pressure.
The theme of a story is the message that the author passes across to the readers. It's the main point in a story. In this case, the theme of the story is that people should not succumb to peer pressure.
In the story, it can be deduced that the death of Marty was because she succumbed to peer pressure. Mr. Feit pushed her in collecting the ruby and she eventually died as a result. Even if other people are doing something bad, we should not join them.
Read related link on:
brainly.com/question/25335844
“Bernice Bobs Her Hair” is largely a discussion of the value of femininity, and of what society expects of a young woman in 1920s America. Nearly every character in this story, major or minor, holds some opinion on the matter—and both Bernice and Marjorie evaluate themselves against the traditional feminine standard, to different conclusions. Fitzgerald uses this very difference to underscore the struggle that teenage girls faced in 1920: that is, being forced to define themselves as a demographic while lacking the maturity to do so in a healthy way. The older model of femininity, represented by Marjorie’s mother, Mrs. Harvey, values women who are delicate, quiet, and marriage-minded. By the 1920s, this approach had become useless in preparing young women for the world. However, the new model that Marjorie represents—aiming to shock, amuse, and allure as many boys as possible—tends to reward only personalities like hers, and offers only shallow rewards at that. Bernice can find no comfortable place between these two extremes, and both sides threaten unpleasant consequences if she fails to conform. Ultimately, Fitzgerald doesn’t propose a solution to this problem, but shows, in Bernice, the impossibility of perfectly conforming to society’s standards of femininity.