To inform the reader of Mrs. Flowers's social position.
By pointing out that Mrs. Flowers was "the aristocrat of Black Stamps", Angelou wants to draw a parallel between the uneducated and underprivileged society of black people and the "normal", white world outside. Black people can also have aristocratic manners - if and when they are provided with the means to educate themselves. Aristocracy is here a metaphor for all the privileges that black people were deprived of. A little girl cannot think in concepts, cannot identify the roots of her obsession with her role model, but simplifies it and interprets it as gentility. Mrs. Flowers is everything that she wants to become when she grows up.
I would say that it is Enchanting
Answer:
Most: Transfiguration Prof. (I can't write the names of anyone I'm sorry!)
Least: Defence Against the Dark Arts Prof.
Explanation:
Harry's Transfiguration Prof. was one of the professors who was present when the Headmaster gave Harry to his aunt and uncle, and she grew to care for him.
His Defence Against the Dark Arts Prof, on the other hand, not only does not have the same compassion as his Transfiguration prof, and he always seems to be present when something goes wrong.
Answer:
The author wants to point out differences in Indian culture and English culture.
The author wants to provide a picture of an Indian girl assimilating to English mode of dress.
Explanation:
Below is an excerpt from paragraph 9 of the attached pdf:
"I suppose there were about a dozen Indian children in the school—which contained perhaps forty children in all—and four of them were in my class. They were all sitting at the back of the room, and I went to join them. I sat next to a small, solemn girl, who didn’t smile at me. She had long, glossy black braids and wore a cotton dress, but she still kept on her Indian jewelry—a gold chain around her neck, thin gold bracelets, and tiny ruby studs in her ears. Like most Indian children, she had a rim of black kohl around her eyes.
The cotton dress should have looked strange, but all I could think of was that I should ask my mother if I couldn’t wear a dress to school, too, instead of my Indian clothes."
Hello.
The most obviously correct sentence would have to be
A. My friends say, "Don't be so shy."