The message that Maureen Daly conveys in the story "Sixteen" is that in affairs of the heart it is best to use your head to temper the feelings of the heart. The main character says, "My heart still prays but my mind laughs. Finally, mind wins!" "Sixteen" is a story of unrequited love. The young girl in the story feels the young man she yearns for is different; he really has feelings for her. But, he never calls, and he ends up being like so many other young men she has fallen for. “I know what the stars knew all the time—he’ll never, never call—never,” she realizes. The message is an age old one that many young people learn over and over as they grow to use reason when dealing with love as opposed to using only their feelings, which run the gamut of love and passion, to anger, and finally to reason and moving on.
Answer: Helen’s teacher taught her all objects have a name opening the world of language
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However, she expands the understanding that God had taken them away in order for her family to live a more pious life. Bradstreet feels guilty that she is hurt from losing earthly possessions. It is against her belief that she should feel this way; showing she is a sinner.
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Im 85% sure that the answer c
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Despite his anger at the argument, Stepan obeys Natalya's request and fetches Ivan- best describes the "father-daughter relationship" section of The Proposal.
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In "The proposal" after the proposal of Ivan and the negative of Natalya to it while she did not know that the proposal was, in fact, a marriage one, she calls him "good for nothing" and when her father tells her that he was in there not to have an argument but to make her a marriage proposal she ask him to go for him really fast, as he does.