Answer: He was not homesick.
Explanation: I took the assignment on edge
Excerpt 1
I lay in bed, quivering underneath my blankets, staring up at the ceiling above me. I heard the pattering of feet, like a small child running on tiptoe. I turned onto my side and closed my eyes. Something was in the attic.
"It's just my imagination," I said quietly.
Scenes from earlier that day played like a movie in my mind. I saw my family's car turning off the highway. I watched as our car turned onto a winding road. The sky was cloudy, and the wind rustled through the Spanish moss hanging from the cypress trees. We drove into the darkness of the trees' shadows.
Excerpt 4
Jeremy raced to the beach and scrambled up onto a log. He pretended it was a spaceship. "Vroom! Roar!" The spaceship blasted off. Jeremy pretended he was soaring through space, searching for flying saucers.
That's when he noticed a small black head poking up from the water. Its two beady eyes stared at him. This creature was definitely not pretend. "Yikes, a space alien!" he screamed, leaping off the log. He dashed for the cabin and burst into the kitchen.
<span>Chapter 4 is very important to Helen Keller’s life. It explains when her teacher was first teaching her how to communicate. Without her teacher Helen probably would not have been able to communicate well or tell people what she wanted. It also demonstrated the way her teacher taught and how Helen reacted. I think that in this chapter Helen learned a little responsibly and learned from her actions. I think that it will make it easier for her because the teacher is helping her learn in ways that no one not even her family and friends could. I think that the teaching will also help her conquer great things in other parts of the book as well because she can be taught she just has to focus. Maybe she will get even closer to her family because of what happened. She learned in this chapter how to match words with what they were. I think this will also help her later in the book. One thing that stuck with me is after learning how to spell doll in the palm of her hand she went to show her mother. This shows that she probably had a good relationship with her mom and she cared what she thought about her. This chapter also showed that people underestimated Helen’s ability’s to learn and communicate with others. I do not think that this will be the most important chapter of the book because so many other great things could happen to her throughout the book. It might very well be the most important but I’m just not quite sure about that. I do have to say this may be one of the most important parts. I do think that the most important chapter will be coming along in the book soon because what happened in this one.</span>
Answer:
She cannot imagine a way for a woman to survive on her own.
Explanation:
According to the play Pygmalion which was written by George Bernard Shaw, Mrs. Higgins is a character in the play who lives in the Victoria Times where women had few career choices, as marriage was the sole aim of every young woman. She does not approve of earning on one's own as a woman, but rather being taken care of financially by a man in marriage.
Mrs. Higgins's point of view influenced by the time and culture in which she lives because she cannot imagine a way for a woman to survive on her own.
I would like to say the answer is "true"