Answer:
A. He saw it as something dangerous.
A. He was hit in the head with a tin can.
Explanation:
In <em>The Rockpile</em>, John sees the rockpile as something dangerous, which is why he does not like the idea of Roy playing there. However, Roy really wants to go and he asks John not to say anything. However, while on the rockpile, Roy gets into a fight, and he is hit in the head with a tin can. As he is brought back home, John is blamed for the fact that he let Roy go.
<span>Immediacy is the ability of the counsellor/helper to use the immediate situation to invite the client to look at what is going on between them in the relationship. It often feels risky and unfamiliar. It implies the use of the present tense. It is one of the most powerful skills in counselling.
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<span>In its fullest use, immediacy involves:
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<span>• revealing how you are feeling/thinking/sensing;
</span>• sharing a hunch or sense of what the client (or helpee) may be feeling/thinking/sensing here and now (and possibly linking this to the client’s issue);
<span>• inviting the client/helpee to explore what is going on between you.</span>
Answer: the first one is "champollion was named "keeper of the egyptian collections" the second one is "he had a tremendous job of deciphering and organizing to do" the third one is "his brother completed it for him" and the last one is "scholars were able to trace the entire history of egyptian writing
<span>"Should I go?" she asked herself when she finished reading the long text message from her friend. The text invited her to come spend the holiday up North. </span>
Answer:
Alvarez shows how her lifelong fascination with her parents' life under the dictatorship was the basis for her writing is correct.
Explanation:
"A genetics of justice" is a book by Julia Alvarez, an American poet and writer whose parents were born in Dominican Republic and lived under Rafael Trujillo's dictatorship, that took place between 1930 and 1961. The book develops this topic and also what the author's perspective was.
In the three excertps, readers can understand that Alvarez learnt a lot from what her parents lived, and this seems to be a very reliable source for her, including words and non verbal signs, such as whispering and her parents' faces when they discussed something related to Trujillo. This fascination and mystery surrounding the dictator could have been the basis for her writing, as we can see in this work and some others written by her; we can also see this in the last excerpt, when her sister told her mother Julia was writing about this topic.