I will try to to different things than my peers because I am not a sheep and I don't want a group of people to tell me what to do. I am aware that I am unique. I will try not to watch TV all day long and I will try to read more. I will try to work out instead of being in front of a computer all the time. I will try to cut down on using my cellphone all the time.
Hello there,
Why did the author choose to provide this fictional account of Iqbal Masih, who was a real person? Check all that apply.
Story:
My first impression was that he was handsome. Then I thought, No, he isn't really good-looking. But he had such eyes. They were sweet and deep and they weren't afraid. He was standing at the threshold of the workroom with Hussain Khan's enormous hand gripping his arm and we were all looking at him. The fourteen of us child-slaves plus Karim, all observing another slave. He was one of the many who had come and gone over the years, but we felt that somehow, this new boy was different. He looked around at us, one by one. He was sad, of course, like anyone who has been away from home for a long time, like anyone who is little more than a slave, like anyone who can't imagine what will become of him.
Answers:
since some of these details are not known
to interpret and share real events
to bring Iqbal to life through descriptive detail and dialogue
to add details, such as characters' thoughts and feelings, to the story
to engage the reader by sharing his point of view about the topic
The answer to the question :
How does Dr. Jekyll’s letter move the plot forward?
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon goes to Dr. Jekyll’s
house and argues with him.
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon forms a plan with Mr.
Utterson to help Dr. Jekyll.
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon reports Dr. Jekyll to
the police.
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon breaks into Dr.
Jekyll’s cabinet and takes his drawer.
Is:
<span>After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon breaks into Dr. Jekyll’s cabinet and takes his drawer.</span>
<span>C) to discuss the infallibility of memory to recall facts correctly from the past
The narrator in this is talking about an important memory from his childhood, but he is nervous when he thinks about how the memory might be 'marred' or changed from the innocence of youth. He remembers the place but hopes that it has remained as pure as he felt it was from his childhood. </span>