Answer:
He had no report card as evidence that he had been to school before
unlike other kids, he was not worried about his clothes, not his academic performance. His experience in the war had changed him in a way that many of the other kids probably would not understand nor were ready to believe [Paragraph 20-25]
his peers found his British-African English to be awkward [Paragraph 27-30]
he was very observant and liked to take different path to avoid being predictable. This was so unlike his friends. [Paragraph 41]
Explanation:
<em></em>
<em></em>
<em>Thatdummyemily </em>
<em>hope this helps srry if it doesn't tho</em>
The correct answer is sarcastic. This <span>word best describes the tone of this passage. It is not meditative, outlandish, or desperate. The tone is sarcastic.
Thank you for posting your question. I hope this answer helped you. Let me know if you need more help.
</span>
They absolutely need each other in their attempt for leadership. Piggy needs Ralph's charisma and natural leadership, and Ralph needs Piggy's rationale and intelligence. However, Ralph also recognized the downfalls of Piggy(physical appearance, un-usable ideas) and didn't always trust what Piggy had to say.
One of my students last year paralleled President Bush and VP Cheney to Ralph and Piggy. At the risk of starting a political argument, that's probably not a bad example...