During the time Lizbeth grows up she doesn’t care about the society outside her community but with time she doesn’t have the will to play childish games anymore and starts to realize that she is becoming a woman.
Nevertheless, all her structure growing up is based in that her father is the <em>rock of the family</em>, the one who provides and takes care of her and her mother.
When Lizbeth listens to a conversation between her mother and her father and sees her father <em>crying</em> because he is unemployed - remember the book is placed during the <em>great depression</em> - she realizes that all she believed in all her life is not real. There is no space anymore for innocence now.
At that moment she realizes that <em>"her childhood faded and her womanhood begun”.</em>
<u>Answer:</u>
The answer is option D as Thomas Paine believes that the American colonists have been fighting most righteously, not adopting the path of war and destruction against the Britishers.
<u>Explanation:</u>
He believes that God will not let them die at the hands of Britishers as Americans have never supported destructive means. The Omnipresent has not left the reins of the world yet. He was there to save innocence and uprightness. So, there was no chance Britishers would win with the help of God.
Answer:
I think D
und the Explanation:
I dont know for sure but to me it sounds the most suitable
you should not mistreat somebody or something if they have done nothing to harm you
Option a. comparison
Metaphor refers to something as being the same as another thing for rhetorical effects.
- provide clarity / identity hidden similarities between 2 ideas compare to and convey an understanding.