Answer:
Write a letter to a friend of yours living overseas telling him or her about the economic hardship
Answer: The answer would be D wait, i have proof too so since in paragraph two you can see it states "This knowledge is what kept her running." Basically kept her running relates to the word anxious and gives us the answer D
The epigraph to Things Fall Apart is taken from Yeats' poem, "The Second Coming."
The first four lines to this poem are an accurate description of what happens to Okonkwo. At the beginning of the novel, life for Okonkwo is passing normally as it had for years. Over the course of the novel, however, things begin to fall apart. In short, "the center cannot hold."
Due in part to his own actions (and his overwhelming desire to be the opposite of his father) Okonkwo goes from being a respected member of Umuofia to being an exile. After the missionaries arrive, things fall apart for Okonkwo even further. Ultimately, Okonkwo falls from grace and takes his own life.
The epigraph to the novel perfectly summarizes the path of Okonkwo in the novel. He goes from being wealthy and respected to someone whose actions make him an outcast and contribute to his death.
Answer:
This is my opinion!
Woods is childhood - ocean is adulthood
As a child, everything is usually the same. Go to school, come home, do homework, play outside, eat dinner, sleep. Repeat, repeat, repeat. Nothing is changing because your parents always have your back, and you have no real responsibilities. As an adult, things are always changing. Something could go wrong at any moment. Forget to pay pills, electricity shuts off, you lose your job, etc.