Because she was treated like a ranch hand and expected to work on the farm and she wasn't really given any freedoms for her first marriage and her second marriage started off good but her husband later became abusive beating her and calling her names. Neither of these marriages she could really leave because she wouldn't have anywhere to go and once she did then she left.
Rhyme, along the meter, helps make a poem musical.
Hope I helped! ( Smiles )
<span>Atticus loses, but the African American community showers him with gifts.
This is ironic because we do not normally give the loser gifts. In this case the African American community are giving gifts to Atticus because of the way he stood up for Tom Robinson. He made sure that the truth came out and treated the African American community with respect.
Bob Ewell wins the court decision, but vows to get Atticus if it takes the rest of his life.
This is ironic because the winner is not expected to get revenge on the loser - he won! However, even though Bob Ewell wins the court decision he feels disrespected by Atticus. By revealing the possible truth of his violence towards Mayella and showing him to be a liar, Atticus shows Bob Ewell to be a bad person even though he is not on trial. This foreshadows the events that happen at the end of the book.
Dill wants to be a clown, but a clown that laughs at the crowd.
This is ironic because clown is not the person who laughs at the crowd. The crowd laughs at the clown. Jem points this out and says, "You go it backwards...</span>Clowns are sad, it’s folks that laugh at
them." This further shows Dill's characterization.
Answer: Rajan always drives to work.
Explanation:
'Always' is an adverb of frequency and when it is alone, it is normally used between the subject and the verb.
With <em>Rajan</em> being the subject and <em>'drives' </em>being the verb, always should be placed between <em>'Rajan</em>' and <em>'drives'</em>.
Answer:
All of them EXCEPT the 2nd and 6th one.
Explanation:
Lol i read through it for you, your'e welcome