The answer will be true. Whenever you are writing a narrative, you have to provide some sort of description throughout it.
Answer:
The main idea is that she describes her grandmother's house as one that increased in size according to how many children she had. Every time that her grandmother became pregnant she would draw up plans so that her husband could build another room in the house.
These contradictory descriptions can be reconciled because they capture both sides of what Hester has become because of her experiences. She is seen as pure, warm, and tender, because she has turned her life around. She is pleased to have her daughter, she helps others in the community, and people have begun to see her as a better person.
She is also seen as cold, because she has to carry the burden of holding a secret (the identity of her husband), and cannot be with the man she wants to be with.
Answer:
The narrator claims that humans do a lot of that same stuff, too. Humans kill others (both people and animals), steal their stuff (just the people), and eat them (just the animals).
Answer:
Explanation:
Option A is the correct answer