Answer:
<h3>Family lost everything in a hurricane, went bankrupt and couldn't afford a normal life.</h3>
Explanation:
- When Noelle was a young girl, her family lost everything in a hurricane and they went bankrupt eventually. It was hard growing up as a teenager for Noelle as she had to take responsibility of her younger siblings and at the same time work extra hours to pay for her tuition and college.
- After she graduated, she again lost her job, money, security and everything within just a week. However, that was the turning point of her life. Noelle then moved to Hawaii and started afresh with a whole new perspective of life.
- She learned to love, interact with different people and learned new things daily. She started to appreciate herself, did what she loved the most and grew every single day.
- Her hardships made her realize that if one falls down hard, it only means bouncing back stronger.
The correct answer is A) the author wants the reader to admire Rosa’s selflessness.
<em>Based on the character of Rosa, the reader can infer of the author’s unstated meaning that the author wants the reader to admire Rosa’s selflessness.
</em>
We are referring to an excerpt of <em>“Saving the Thrift Store: A Drama</em>”, written by Lee Washington.
In the excerpt, Rosa is having a dialogue with Louis and Eddie. Rosa says “It is a shame that I am the youngest in my family, since I’d be happy to pass my old clothes to kids who wanted them”. She listens to her friends and she adds “That thrift store had a great selection of inexpensive clothes. Postponing a reopening is bad for the families that rely on that store.”
When reading those excerpts, based on the character of Rosa, the reader can infer of the author’s unstated meaning that the author wants the reader to admire Rosa’s selflessness.
<span>The servants are more serious about the feud than their masters.</span>
Hellen Keller was born in 1880. She was an American writer and lecturer. She was deaf and blind. Hellen was educated by Anne Mansfield Sullivan, the one who taught her to communicate by using sings. She became a famous author and the first blind-deaf person to have a college degree and such amount of prizes and recognition. She died at the age of 88 in 1968.