Are these good chapter titles for the outsiders?
for chapter one i put "the east side greasers"
for chapter two i have "dicovery of the good-girl soc" and "things are rough all over" (as cherry says in the book)
for chapter three i have "the runaways"
for chapter four i have "when natures first green turns black" (johnny kills bob and in chapter five,the first of "nothing gold can stay" is "Nature's first green is gold")
for chapter five i was thinking something like "gone with the gold" (referring to gone with the wind and nothing gold can stay,both allusions included in chapter five)
for chapter six i was thinking "heroes of windrixville" or "from hoodlum greasers to windrixville heroes"
The correct answer should be:
A. <span>Tennyson's poem criticizes the officers who ordered the charge, while Southey's poem praises the generals who led the battle.</span>
Tennyson stressed out the mistake done by the officers for pursuing that battle disregarding the safety of the soldiers, All they did was order everyone to fight but with no other choice but to die. On the other hand, Southey emphasized the leadership of the officers in the war because they have attained the fruits of victory.
Answer:
<h3>husband would turn into a beast like a werewolf because of the cursed bloodline in the family</h3>
Explanation:
The assumption about the change in the characters which I had made was that the <u>husband would turn into a beast like a werewolf because of the cursed bloodline in the family.</u>
Since no exact detail was given at the beginning of the story about what the husband would look like once changed, I <u>assumed that he would change into a pale beast with large body. </u>
The assumption was inferred upon through these lines "He was white all over then, like a worm’s skin. And he turned his face. It was changing while I looked, it got flatter and flatter, the mouth flat and wide, and the teeth grinning flat and dull, and the nose just a knob of flesh with nostril holes, and the ears gone, and the eyes gone blue — blue, with white rims around the blue — staring at me out of that flat, soft, white face."
Not sure....sorry maybe some else can help k
C) They dramatize the greatness that Othello eventually loses.