This question is incomplete; here´s the complete question.
Read Abalone, Abalone, Abalone, by Toshio Mori
Why does the author describe the extent to which the narrator is puzzled by mr. abe’s collecting?
Why does the author describe the extent to which the narrator is puzzled by Mr. Abe’s collecting?
A. To give insight into the narrator’s culture
B. To explain the narrator’s relationship with Mr. Abe
C. To establish the narrator as unreliable.
D. To make the narrator’s later shift in understanding more significant
Answer: D. To make the narrator’s later shift in understanding more significant
Explanation:
At first, the narrator highlights how much he´s intrigued about why would Mr. Abe keep collecting and polishing abalone shells since his front porch was practically full of them already. This initial mystery becomes more significant when the narrator finds an abalone shell, understands the reason for that practice, and starts a collection of his own.
Part one:
2) "I want to go to bed."
3) "We'll be arriving at six o'clock."
4) "I don't like cheese."
5) "I went to Italy in 2009."
6) "I am reading a book."
7) "We received a lot of good advice."
8) "I am not going to do the washing-up."
part two:
2) was
3) are appealing
4) was going to search
5) were launching
6) made
7) thought, was
I believe these are correct!
Answer: Wayne is the owner of a grain elevator company. The two of them are very good friends.
Explanation:
Into the Wild is a 1996 best-selling book by Jon Krakauer. The book is a story about Christopher McCandless, who hiked across North America into the Alaskan wilderness.
In the story, Wayne Westerberg is the owner of a grain elevator company. Wayne was involved in the television signals piracy, which is why he served a sentence. He assists McCandless and picks him up hitchhiking. The two of them gradually become very good friends. Wayne gives Chris a job on multiple occasions and proves to be a rather generous and kind man.
Isn't this supposed to be in a text??
Sry but idk the answer