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tekilochka [14]
2 years ago
13

What are Ruth’s values in a raisin in the sun

English
1 answer:
Inessa [10]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Because of her family's poor financial situation, she has to double as a housewife and a working mother, working as a domestic worker, who is a person that cleans the homes of other people.

Explanation:

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what evidence in Music for My Mother supports the statement that shows that moving to a new country is hard ?
Katen [24]

Answer:

<u><em>After dinner my older brother liked to play the guitar. He preferred </em></u>

<u><em>the music he heard on the radio, but he played the traditional </em></u>

<u><em>songs for Mama. She enjoyed things that reminded her of home. </em></u>

<u><em>Her eyes hurt and her fingers would get sore from long hours of </em></u>

<u><em>work as a seamstress. I remember washing dishes while Pedrito sang: </em></u>

<u><em>“And seeing myself so lonely and sad like a leaf in the wind, I want </em></u>

<u><em>to cry . . . from this feeling.” </em></u>

<u><em>He sang in Spanish, which is how the lyrics were written. That </em></u>

<u><em>song is more than 100 years old now. Mama learned it when she was </em></u>

<u><em>a girl. </em></u>

<u><em>Papa tried to nudge Mama out of her nostalgia sometimes. He </em></u>

<u><em>would answer her in English when she spoke to him in Spanish. His </em></u>

<u><em>English was not very good at first, but he worked at it until it got </em></u>

<u><em>better. </em></u>

<u><em>Mama usually answered him in Spanish. They would go back </em></u>

<u><em>and forth in either language, talking about work or homesickness </em></u>

<u><em>or family. Pedrito or I would occasionally correct them or help them </em></u>

<u><em>finish their sentences in English. Papa would thank us. Mama would </em></u>

<u><em>just smile and shake her head. But she always repeated the words we </em></u>

<u><em>had helped her with. In time her English got better too, but she was </em></u>

<u><em>far more at ease in her native tongue. </em></u>

<u><em>I was seven years old when we came to the United States. Pedrito </em></u>

<u><em>was 11. Papa was a carpenter who also knew a little about plumbing </em></u>

<u><em>and electricity. From an early age, my brother and I learned how to </em></u>

<u><em>take care of ourselves in our new home. Our parents worked long </em></u>

<u><em>hours, and they counted on us to be independent. </em></u>

<u><em>At first we were almost like guides for Mama and Papa. In big </em></u>

<u><em>busy places, like the mall or the registry of motor vehicles, they felt </em></u>

<u><em>uncomfortable, if not overwhelmed. It was easier for us to adjust </em></u>

<u><em>to environments that were fast-paced and not always friendly. I felt </em></u>

<u><em>protective of my parents and also proud of how quickly I learned my </em></u>

<u><em>way around. </em></u>

<u><em>It would hurt my feelings to see the way some people looked at us. </em></u>

<u><em>For a while, on Sundays and holidays we would wear our best clothes </em></u>

<u><em>from home. Before long, we learned to wear casual clothes almost all </em></u>

<u><em>the time, like most people in this country do. And after a while, our </em></u>

<u><em>parents became more at ease in stores or government offices. They </em></u>

<u><em>relaxed a little, I suppose, and we attracted less attention. </em></u>

<u><em>Mama and Papa live with Pedrito now, in a two-family home </em></u>

<u><em>outside of Houston. Pedrito is now known as Peter. He runs a </em></u>

<u><em>construction business that employs 14 men and women. </em></u>

<u><em>Papa is in his seventies now. Pedrito would like for him to </em></u>

<u><em>slow down a little and enjoy retirement, but Papa says that Mama </em></u>

<u><em>wouldn’t want him sitting around the house getting in her way. </em></u>

<u><em>He rises at dawn almost every day and goes to work with Pedrito, </em></u>

<u><em>building houses. </em></u>

<u><em>I am a teacher. This summer I will be taking my son, Michael, to </em></u>

<u><em>visit his grandparents. He is twelve. He wants to learn to play the </em></u>

<u><em>guitar. I want Mama and his Uncle Peter to teach him a few of the </em></u>

<u><em>good old songs.</em></u>

<u><em /></u>

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3 years ago
The reader can conclude that the narrator of "The Shawl" is a bridge between past and present, between tradition and the modern
iogann1982 [59]

Answer:

"Stella liked everything from Rosa's junkshop, everything used, old, lacy with other people's history."

Explanation:

The story is about Rosa and Stella who are refugees in America.

Stella is Rosa's niece.

They both left Poland some years ago. They are both affected by the memories of the Holocaust in Poland. The both try to cope with the memory.

Stella copes by attempting to forget and build a new life in New York while Rosa finds it extremely difficult to cope. Rosa resorted to destroying her New York store and moves to a cheap hotel in Miami. Rosa suffers lack of mutual support there and relies Stella for financial support.

3 0
3 years ago
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Darya [45]

Answer:

Explanation:

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8 0
3 years ago
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3 years ago
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