The lines which are a flashback here are: She thought of her last day in middle school, seven years ago, when Sarah had given her an iPod. She had felt ecstatic that day when she realized she would be able to listen to her favorite songs and fend off comments from her cousins about how little she knew about music.
The tone at the beginning of Birthplace is shameful and disappointed. It reflects the way her mother felt when she gave birth to her and saw that she had a girl and not a boy. This point in the poem, however, radiates strength and reflects the narrator's want to fight against injustice. The line "I’ll peel from the wall that ashamed look of my mother" says that she is no longer ashamed of herself for being born a certain way. She's saying that when she returns to her birthplace, she won't see it as the place where her mother's greatest disappointment was born. It is now a place where a strong woman was born.
Answer:
In the image, I see an angry woman kicking who I assume to be her newly wedded husband very hard. So hard, in fact that he's flying back a bit. The husband seems scared, or perhaps shocked at what she's doing. I wonder what he could've done that was so awful to have caused her to kick him on what I could guess as a happy wedding.
Explanation:
hope that helps! its a little over 3 sentences, BUT I used 6 different adjectives. ^w^
This is what subject-verb agreement is:
<em>I walk</em>
versus
<em>He walks</em>
When you put something between the subject (I/he) and the verb (walk(s)), the verb does not change.
<em>
</em><em>I slowly walk.
</em><em>He quickly walks.</em>