Answer:
“Sounds like the Arabian Nights”?
It talks about the magic genie in Aladdin's lamp, who also grants three wishes. So she is mocking, and not taking this seriously. Maybe foreshadowing about being pure at heart, and his intentions aren’t pure. Wishes of the unwise and evil will lead only to their end, it’s a negative connotation. Thus, this famous reference creates a negative tone and points to the seriousness of tempting ones fate. This also foreshadows the outcome for a foolish wish. Will his wishes be well-planned or impulsive?
Why, we’re going to be rich, famous, and happy.”? Explain.
Dramatic because we are aware and pay attention to the foreshadowing and gravity of the situation whereas the Whites do not.
Verbal, because Herbert does not believe in the power of the paw.
What does this line spoken by Mr. White help you predict?
“It seems to me I’ve got all I want.”
Answer: that the wishes can only change his life for the worse
Which line foreshadows what happens to Herbert?
“I don’t see the money . . . and I bet I never shall.”
Explanation: Well, I don't see the money," said his son, as he picked it up and placed it on the table, "and I bet I never shall." Herbert picked up the paw and said this, and his wish came true since he died. It’s ironic because the reader didn’t expect him to wish for his own death by accident.