Answer: You won't learn a lesson if you don't study regularly.
Explanation: *shrugs*
Answer:
Despite the fact that he was both excited and terrified to leave with his uncle in the wagon, Ned was overjoyed to be leaving the tribe. His parents will be proud because they know he has the capability to understand and utilize the white ways, and that will allow him to speak to them and aid them in their daily lives.
<em><u>Quote:</u></em>
<em><u>"I turned to look up at my uncle's kind face. […] I was frightened by the thought of being away from home for the first time in my life, but I was also trying to find courage. My uncle seemed to know that.
</u></em>
<em><u>
"Little Boy," he said, "Sister's first son, listen to me. You are not going to school for yourself. You are doing this for your family. To learn the ways of the bilagáanaa, the white people is a good thing. Our Navajo language is sacred and beautiful. Yet all the laws of the United States, those laws that we now have to live by, are in English."</u></em>
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Only the biography states their father was a minister.
From the third line of the biography, the second sentence started with explicitly saying that their father was a minister. A fact which isn't mentioned anywhere in the extracted memoir. The memoir gave a much more different insight and even personal perspective to how both brothers lived. But it never stated the occupation of their father beyond he being their father
Elizabeth is the character who identifies the rockpile as a dangerous place. This story was taken from the short story collection, Going to Meet the Man. The setting of the story is <span>in a small part of town where you can see the whole street from your balcony.</span>