Answer:
Hover for more information. Jem tells Scout that "it (is) not until one reache(s) the sixth grade that one learn(s) anything of value" (Chapter 7). Scout, who is in the second grade when Jem tells her this, is having a horrible time at school.
Explanation:
The general insinuation is that Scout is too boyish for the times they live in, so Aunt Alexandra decided it would be good idea to teach Scout how to be a lady while she (Alexandra) was staying in town.
Answer:
Thoreau feels as if he is in harmony with the aspects of his environment.
Answer:
Cricket was played by him.
Explanation:
'He played cricket' is the active voice as the subject 'He' is performing the action 'playing' on the object 'cricket'. In passive voice, the subject 'cricket' is receiving the action 'was played' by him. Please also note that the tense has to remain the same. The active voice is in the simple past tense, so the passive voice must follow by adding 'was'.
Hope this helps and please mark as the brainliest.
Answer:
To me, this statement is kind of a mixture between the realization that you can't and you're not going to win every time you play anything, and your character has to rise above that. We're all going to face failures, whether they be minor or major, sports related or not, but we all have to experience it sooner or later. There's no avoiding it. I think we each have to realize though, that it's not completely the failure itself that is responsible for our actions, but how we respond and cope to the defeat. We can choose to reflect on it for as long as we feel is needed, but we can take past failures and loses, and use them as motivations and teaching moments so that we may have future successes.