Answer:
Get upstairs! And don’t come down with dirty hands.
Explanation:
This is the line that best helps the audience understand Kate's frustration with her son. In this part of the play, Kate is annoyed at the fact that her son has hit the house with his ball, giving his aunt a headache. Kate expresses her frustration by urging him to go upstairs and wash his hands.
<em>Brighton Beach Memoirs</em> is a play by Neil Simon, part of the Eugene trilogy.
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Answer and Explanation:
In Amy Tan's short story "Rules of the Game", the conflict is mainly external, man vs. man or, more specifically, daughter vs. mother. Waverly and her mother seem incapable of understanding each other's feelings and demonstrations of such feelings. That is made very clear toward the end of the story, when the mother proudly introduces Waverly to every one, even strangers, on the street. Waverly is a sort of child prodigy, a chess genius, and her mother can't help but display her. Waverly, however, does not enjoy being exhibited, reacting in a way that is disrespectful and offensive, in her mother's opinion.
A writer picks sentences that are related in some way.