Answer:
"But he'd said, ‘I'll call you.' That's what he said—‘I'll call you.'"
Explanation:
<em>Sixteen </em>is a short story written by Maureen Daly, an Irish-born American writer best known for the works she wrote while she was still in her teens. <em>Sixteen </em>is one of these works. She wrote it when she was sixteen years old.
The story tells about a girl who meets a boy at the skating rink and begins to like him. The line <em>But he'd said, ‘I'll call you.' That's what he said—‘I'll call you.' </em>follows their separation. The narrator hopes the boy will call her and convinces herself that he will do so. However, soon we find out that the boy didn't call. This is how the story ends.
According to the details in this excerpt, the people from Manhattan and Brooklyn
will still prefer to cross the river by ferry unless the weather does not allow it.
Explanation:
The excerpt describes the habit of the common working people who have to shuffle between their residence and the work and in between have to take the ferry through the newly constructed bridge.
This makes the space of Brooklyn available for work for them as is said there.
This also makes for the fact that the people of the area would prefer too live where they live and work where they work and will be convenience by this effort.
Answer:
I'd love to
Explanation:
I hope you like it
I walk past her house
Wondering what she's like now
The sky is grey
But i'm still blue
I see others
But don't want it to be trouble.
The sky's blue again
I bump into them
I wonder if this one will like me
But what if she wont
what if i have to find another
the struggles just to stay with each other
I try to think it'll be fine
But no more like the opposite of divine
I get stressed
wishing she never left.
Ok this may not be the best but i tried
Coins symbolized the frailty of our currency and how we value something of little substance that's only value is the one we give it.