<span>The simplicity of </span>Emily Dickinson's poem A Day<span> is brought to life in images of life's ordinary things. Through the eyes of an inquisitive child, Emily takes the reader on a mental journey from the miracle of sunrise to the mystery of sunset.
Hope it helps! :D</span>
Answer:
<h3>A) </h3>
1) tidied
My sister <em><u>tidied</u></em><em><u> </u></em><u> </u> her room yesterday
2) didn't tidy
My sister <em><u>didn</u></em><em><u>'t</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>tidy</u></em><em><u> </u></em> her room yesterday
3) Did, tidy
<em><u>Did</u></em><em><u> </u></em> your sister <em><u>tidy</u></em><em><u> </u></em> her room yesterday?
<h3>B)</h3>
1) lived
We lived in London last summer.
2) didn't live
We didn't live in London last summer
3) Did, live
Did you live in London last summer?
The correct answer is A. She contemplates killing both Pearl and herself to escape their torment.
She is living in a Puritan society which is there to judge her every move - so when she cheats on her presumably dead husband, and gives birth to a girl, obviously her life turns to hell (even though it is mostly self-inflicted). She wants to escape that hell through death, which she would give to both herself and her daughter.
Answer:
Experience and Perception of teacher in his mind.
Explanation:
When university students in the United States walk into a classroom on the first day, they observe that there is a person standing in the front of the classroom with a folder open on a podium and a stack of papers on the desk. Based on their experience, they decide that this must be the instructor. One student approaches the person and asks, "Are you the instructor?"
The student's question is an example of his Experience and Perception.
Answer:
Desire for revenge was not one of the emotions he felt, or at least not immediately. Consider all of the energy and emotion Eliezer had expended simply to survive, just to get to that point at the end where liberation was even possible. It may well be that he simply wasn't capable of rage or revenge at that point.
Explanation: