At the beginning of act two, scene two, there is a conflict between George and Beneatha after they get home. They have dated many times before, and when they were out this time, he tells her that he expects to have a more physical relationship with her, revealing his thoughts about education, that he sees it only as a way to get money.
When he tried to kiss her at the couch while she was trying to have a conversation telling him about her dream of becoming a doctor, she moved away and refused to kiss him. George gets angry saying that "he expects women to appear sophisticated but not to express sophisticated opinions" (C) as she's been doing many times, calling her moody and her thoughts stupid. Beneatha resolves it by ending the relationship calling him a fool. He wouldn't take her seriously and she could not change his mind deciding he is not the man for her.
Answer:
Descriptive
Explanation:
This was honestly hard. But Clinque is describing things he is forgetting. By describing things he is forgetting this turns into descriptive.
Answer:
Revenge
Explanation:
the theme is made apparent through the movement of the characters' actions.Many of the characters' actions are completed based upon one, singular idea: enacting revenge upon another. At the same time, the themes of death and fate are woven together with revenge.
To show different stages of life as they move on with time for example you don’t turn 5 and then 27. It’s to organize the stages of life and dates and times. Because biographies are about a persons life and how they grew up or came to fame so putting it in chronological order would help organize the historical events of that persons life. I think but I could be wrong.