Well in Chapter 31, Scout has walked Boo back to the Radley's place, boo walks inside and she just stands there,
she turns around to look at her neighborhood
Her neighborhood from 'His' point of view
Jem and Scout had always been iffy about Boo Radley and thought he was a monster... But of course readers will later find that Boo is Surely the Hero of the story...
Atticus' was right after all, you'll never know or understand a person until you've placed yourself in their shoes, Scout standing in the threshold of the Radley place and looking out at the street is the embodiment of the words of Atticus
Answer:
redundancy
Explanation:
if its the daily paper, delivering it every day is unnecessary
Answer:
I feel like C is good I'm sorry if it's wrong
The Wikipedia answer is: "Rebecca Towne Nurse was executed for witchcraft by the government of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in New England during the Salem Witch Trials in 1692. She was the wife of Francis Nurse, with several children and grandchildren, and a well-respected member of the community."
Hope this helps :)
Answer:
The conflict that Santha and Premila experience when they met the Headmistress was that she tried to change the names of Santha and Premila, which suggests that people were trying to change them and their identity.
Explanation:
'By Any Other Name' is a short story written by Santha Rama Rau. The story is the story of two sisters who were forced to attend Anglo Indian School. The story is set during the times of British Raj in India. The story sheds light on the discrimination faced by Indian students by English people in the school (abd outside as well.)
The conflict that arouse in the story when Santha and Premila met the Headmistress was the she changed their names. Name of a person reflects much about his or her identity and culture, of which they were robbed in the school by their English Headmistress.
<u>The Headmistress changes the name of Santha to Cynthia and Premila to Pamela because their Indian names were difficult to pronounce by them. </u>