Answer:
The correct option is:
The instructor is trying to put a positive spin on an unfortunate situation
Explanation:
When the author's mother took her to a beauty training school in the Mission district, she put her in the hands of a student who didn't know how to cut hair, who couldn't even hold scissors without shaking his hand. The author wanted to get big curls, but ended up having a mess of uneven short hair. Then the instructor comes up then and tried his best to make the hair even. In the end, her hair was cut so short that it looked like a boys head. Then the instructor says this words to put a positive spin and to make the author feel better
Answer: Mildred spends the majority of her day watching her parlor walls.
Explanation:
Mildred lives a wretched existence in her everyday life by acting obsessed with soap operas that are televised on her wall-sized TV screens. Mildred's unimportant life is entirely absorbed by senseless entertainment, plus she is intrigued by the interactive television shows that enable her to engage in the plot by giving her easy lines to read. She has three walls of her living room engulfed in these screens and provokes Montag to purchase a fourth. The soap operas are interactive. Viewers get scripts and roles to act out along with the actors on the screen. Television has become her foremost means of entertainment. She is fully involved in their false lives and regards them as her family.
American history repeats its self in several ways in this time for example racism still exists today maybe not as bad as before but it’s still out of control also the unfair justice system still exists and has yet to be delt with
Answer:
A
Explanation:
the descriptive details help the reader understand what the narrator is feeling. It gives a bigger sense of things
Answer:
Ebbs and flows in this context mean that human misery comes and goes.
Explanation:
The poem, Dover Beach, written by Matthew Arnold, uses the term 'ebbs and flows' to describe how human misery comes and goes. Ebbs and flows, in the context of sea movement, refers to the coming (flows) and going (ebbs) of the sea tides.
We can say that though hardships and miseries are experienced by all humans, eventually, it would all go away, drifting into the sea as we continue to live on and experience more happiness and betterment flowing in.
The stanza referred is this excerpt:
Sophocles long ago
Heard it on the Ægean, and it brought
Into his mind the turbid ebb and flow
Of human misery; we
Find also in the sound a thought,
Hearing it by this distant northern sea.