Answer:
Tom and Daisy Buchanan have a marriage of convenience. Tom likes the idea of a beautiful and socially savvy wife; while Daisy enjoys having a wealthy and well-connected husband. Their relationship is toxic and unhealthy, yet they seem to have no intention of working to make it better.
Tom is publicly unfaithful and has been so since their honeymoon. He had a fling with a maid in a Santa Barbara hotel where he and Daisy... ehh well to put it sraight no you cant call this love
Explanation:
Explanation:
At least 12 annotations about the figurative language in a scene from The Tempest • Annotations that cover at least three different types of figurative language • A paragraph about your partner's scene that analyzes Shakespeare's message about colonialism and imperialism in The Tempest • Evidence from the scene to support your analysis You should have completed a draft of this assignment in the activity before this one. If you haven't done so, go back and complete that activity now.
The tone of the story "Talk" by Harold Courlander and George Herzog is humorous. The story revolves around a farmer being first frightened by the talking yam whom he wants to dig, followed by the dog who told him to listen to the yam, then the palm tree who warned him not to cut its branch. The farmer ran off meeting a fisherman who also ran off hearing the fish trap talk. They come across a weaver whose bundle of cloth talked and then ran with them together. The story is really funny because of the talking characters in the story including the stool in the chief's house.