2.) Miss the train. 3.) Shout at us. 4.) Take some photos. 5.) Sell his house. 6.) Change it. 7.) Makes a cake. 8.) Falls off. 9.) Play in the snow. 10.) Makes some tea.
Answer:
The passage uses the interrogative mood to get people to think and to ask themselves questions.
Explanation:
The way the questions are posed they are rhetorical which is a characteristic of interrogative mood.
The significance of Ernesto Galarza's memoir taking place in California in the story is that the story tells of a Mexican boy beginning school without knowing the language or culture of the place.
The boy was an immigrant who has not inkling of what he will face as he begins his life journey in California.
Answer:
Step 1: Hello Bunny
Import the PyGame library. ...
Initialize PyGame and set up the display window.
Load the image that you will use for the bunny.
Keep looping over the following indented code. ...
Fill the screen with black before you draw anything.
Add the bunny image that you loaded to the screen at x=100 and y=100.
Answer:
From the beginning it was his intention to have her killed by Lennie.
Explanation:
. From the beginning it was his intention to have her killed by Lennie. Lennie has to do something terrible and unforgivable in order for George to decide to shoot him. This is what the story is about: a man kills his best friend out of compassion. Naturally we feel sorry for Curley's wife--but Steinbeck doesn't want us to feel too sorry for her because that would make us feel less sorry for Lennie as well as for George. Steinbeck inserted that memorable scene in which the girl frightens and humiliates Crooks in order to make her seem somewhat less sympathetic. Otherwise she is just an unfortunate, unhappy, very young girl who is an innocent victim of Curley, Lennie, and an underprivileged background. Steinbeck was trying to make the girl seem like a real person, trying to make her sympathetic but not too sympathetic, cruel but not too cruel, immoral but not too immoral. He did not want her to steal the spotlight from Lennie. If we feel too sorry for Curley's wife when she is killed, then we won't feel sufficiently sorry for Lennie when he gets killed; we would feel that he got just what he deserved. That would spoil Steinbeck's great dramatic ending, which was what he was aiming for from the time he wrote the first sentence of his book. Of Mice and Men is George and Lennie's story.