Answer:
A) Be a fool
Explanation:
Because thats what she was! I took the test! <3
Hope this helps! Plz mark as brainliest!
Answer:
“Daughter of Invention” is one of fifteen interconnected stories that form the novel How the García Girls Lost Their Accents (1991), which relates the experiences of four sisters who move to New York City from the Dominican Republic to escape the repressive regime of General Rafael Trujillo, who was dictator from 1930 .
<u>O way it handles things on streets</u>
Explanation:
There is a needless ambiguity in this phrase that would just confuse the reader. it is not good prose when you can use just as many words and explain what the problem is but instead just use the word 'things' to describe them.
<u>The sentence begs to understand what exactly it is that the car does not understand on the road or has a difficulty to follow but this is left unanswered in the text of the paragraph.</u>
So this is where the author must re question their word choice for the passage.
Answer:
Since this the title is depicting one's personal life I in the Chinese Prison it would be A. Autobiography. This is where personal information about who the person is and his/her back story and upbringing are provided along with any major struggles and hurdles that they had overcome.
From the beginning this passage talked about Faizula
doing things for other people, not really looking for anything in return. He didn’t
want to bother the person behind him by leaning his seat back, let other people
go ahead even though he didn’t really want to. For a while it didn’t seem like
he would catch a break but when he was nice to the guy selling roses, and he
saw how it impacted him, all his niceness payed off.
I think the roses in the story represent the beauty
that can come out of one kind act. It sounds cheesy but, in the story, it talked
about how Faizula felt good about giving the man a smile and extra money, even
though the whole day he was being kind to no avail. The man was trying to sell
the roses to many people but each one shot him down, then when Faizula changed
his mind and bought one it changed the man’s whole mood, and in a way gave him
hope.
Faiula’s culture influences the story by creating a
sort of guideline we know he must follow. Not only should one be always kind
but self-disciplinary. He showed self-discipline when he didn’t break his fast
and chose to focus on his work. Through out the story he was consistent with
his actions and thoughts and that emphasizes how good of a person he really is.