Answer:
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The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant
The Necklace book cover
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Why is Mme Loisel unhappy when she receives an invitation to an evening reception in "The Necklace"?
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M.P. OSSA, M.A. eNotes educator | CERTIFIED EDUCATOR
The simple answer is that Madame Loisel is upset that she does not have anything to wear that is worthy of the occasion. More noteworthy still is how she reacts to the invitation, showing complete contempt and disregard for the efforts of her husband to secure the invitation for her.
Instead of being delighted, as her husband had hoped, she threw the invitation on the table crossly, muttering:
"What do you wish me to do with that?"
There is much more to Mathilde's reaction than just the fact that she has nothing to wear. Mathilde is a self-absorbed woman who feels that she is entitled to all the good things in life, despite of the fact that she has done nothing to earn them, nor has she ever come from money, in the first place.
When she says that she has nothing to wear, she does not say this with the humbleness that distinguishes a good woman of limited means. Instead, she uses sarcasm and haughtiness, as if demanding from her husband--or from life itself--that she gets those things.
She even goes as far as telling her husband that 400 francs would do for a new dress (which she is only going to wear once), so she took the savings that he had put aside for a hunting trip to buy the dress. More importantly for Mathilde was the jewelry to wear. Since she had none, she had to resort to her rich friend, Madame Forestier, who lends her the necklace for which the story is titled: a necklace that gets lost, and whose replacement will cost Mathilde her entire life.
Answer:
The Tale Of Two Cities
Explanation:
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Answer:
MRCORRECT has answered the question
Explanation:
Atticus and Alexandra had a major disagreement earlier (in Chapter 14) when they argued about whether Calpurnia would be remaining in the household. ... Atticuswon that argument. In Chapter 16, Alexandrafirst admonished her brother for what she considered speaking a little too honestly in front of Calpurnia.
Answer:
No, he wasn't.
Edgar Allan Poe was an American writer,considered one of the initiators of the genre of horror and sinister stories. During his first years of life, his life was difficult, losing his parents at 3 and being adopted by an adoptive family.
During his later years, he had severe financial and personal difficulties. Thus, at the time he published his famous works, they did not have the success that they would later acquire.
Also, personally, he was not doing much better. He married his cousin Virginia in 1836, but she died in 1847 of tuberculosis. Haunted by these hardships, he tried to kill himself in 1848, and finally died a year later, after having spent a year living on the streets and with alcoholism problems.
All his experiences directly influenced the style of his works, making them gloomy, sad and bleak, just as he considered life to be.
to show why he likes to ignore people who say that he is paranoid
B.
to explain the pressure caused by people who call him paranoid
с
to show his lack of respect toward people who call him paranoid
D
to respond to criticisms from people who say that he is paranoid
Answer:
A
Explanation:
In the last sentence he states 'it's simply none of their business.' This shows his disregard towards people who call him paranoid.
Awnser:
Annihilate- Destroy utterly; obliterate
annihilate. Killing ends when the thing you are killing (your sworn enemy, all hope, a pesky mosquito) is dead. Annihilate goes farther-when you annihilate something, you wipe all trace of it from the earth. You kill a person, but you annihilate a tribe, a town, or even a species.