Answer:
Explanation:
1. c
2. d
3. b
4. a
5. e
6. f
1. You shouldn't <u><em>bottle up </em></u>your feelings; now, tell me what's wrong.
2. I was going to go bungee jumping, but then I <u><em>chickened out!</em></u>
3. <u><em>Cheer up!</em></u> Things will be better tomorrow, I'm sure of it.
4. I really <u><em>freaked out</em></u> when I saw that huge spider in the bathroom!
5. The little boy <u><em>burst into </em></u> tears when his favorite toy broke.
6. Please <u><em>calm down </em></u> and tell me what happened.
Cherry and Marcia are two popular girls who become friends with The Outsiders narrator, Ponyboy, his brothers, and his Greaser friends. When Cherry first meets Ponyboy, they bond over their unusual first names. She tells him, ''My name's Sherri, but I'm called Cherry because of my hair. Cherry Valance.'' Marcia is ''a little smaller than Cherry. She was cute, but that Cherry Valance was a real looker.'' The girls are dating Soc boys, but they're the first Socs that Ponyboy and his friends get to know, and it gives them a different perspective on their rivals. Cherry and Marcia are pretty, friendly, and fun.
<span>Liesel’s father had "disappeared". He was an active communist and it is implied that Hitler had something to do with his disappearance. Because of her father's political past, Liesel's mother was deemed unfit to parent. This is why Liesel and her brother were being taken to live with a foster family.</span>
The Shakespeare Stealer is a 1998 historical fiction novel by Gary Blackwood. Taking place in the Elizabethan-era England, it recounts the story of Widge, an orphan whose master sends him to steal Hamlet from The Lord Chamberlain's Men. If we skip the opening setting of Mistress MacGregor's orphanage, then the three settings of The Shakespeare Stealer are the rectory in "the nearby hamlet of Berwick"; the home of Mrs. and Dr. Timothy Bright, a medical practitioner who had studied at Cambridge and who was also the rector of Berwick; Simon Bass's home in Leicester; and the city on the Thames, London City, home of the Globe Theatre.
Answer:
ominous
Explanation:
giving the impression that something bad or unpleasant is going to happen; threatening; inauspicious.