Answer:
This chapter begins right after the incident with the Cunningham mob. Atticus brings the two children home, and Jem is eating a heaping helping of breakfast. Aunt Alexandra is very unhappy that Scout and Jem snuck out.
Children who slipped out at night were a disgrace to the family.
Atticus said he was right glad his disgraces had come along, but Aunty said, "Nonsense, Mr. Underwood was there all the time." (ch 16)
Atticus feels differently about the incident than his sister. He feels that Scout and Jem got an important lesson about people’s behavior, and he is also happy that Scout was able to talk to Mr. Cunningham and bring him to his senses, deflating a very tense situation.
The trial has brought many conflicts to the Finch household. Aunt Alexandra has a very rigid view of behavior, especially children's behavior. She thinks that Atticus exposes his children to too many things they should not see. It is not as much their sneaking out that bothers her, but their continuous involvement in all of the unsavory aspects of the trial.
Explanation:
Expansion is the correct answer
<span>The line "Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting" is both a metaphor and a paradox is a </span>False statement. It is a metaphor but not a paradox because it doesn't contradict.
Answer:
A - the use of several short phrases connected by commas.
Explanation:
Reading those short phrases connected by commas give the excerpt a rhytm, a speed, and keeps up a pace.
" I was paralyzed with terror, cold with fright, ready to shout out, ready to die."
Option B: there isn't very detailed or descriptive imagery.
C: None of the words slow down the sentence.
D: the technique or procedure used in option A fits.
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