Food is a status symbol as well as a powerful tool for characterization.
Explanation:
In 19th century England,<u> availability of a wide variety f food was itself a status symbol</u> as most people relied on staple diets from the farms they could grow it on. The upper class characters in the play are thus fixated on their exotic and varied food items, centering much of their social life around meals.
Food also symbolizes characters in the play. <u>Algernon has an unending appetite for flashy foods: suggesting his flamboyant and boisterous personality.</u>
Muffins, tea cakes and cucumber sandwiches form the basis of conversation on multiple occasions in the play where the general mood is of establishing one's stature.
Answer:
B. Discuss her observations, thoughts, and feelings and explain what she desires to have happen next
Explanation:
The best way is to explain to her friend what she has noticed and why she feels that way. They can sort out any misunderstandings that way. Directly asking her why she has been keeping secrets does not let her friend know why she feels that way and may create an issue.
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We see that Abigail is willing to harm herself in order to make it look like it was Elizabeth's witchcraft. So if we look at her as somebody that, metaphorically represents the poppet, the way you hurt the poppet to hurt somebody else. That is the way I see it, she is hurting herself in order to "hurt" Elizabeth.
I am very confused by this question, try uploading the excerpt...
No its Latin roots i believe