![shanicar33500](/avatars/43472.jpg)
shanicar33500
13.11.2020 •
English
What’s a topic where you have no ethos?
Solved
Show answers
More tips
Answers on questions: English
- E English Your uncle has asked you to tell him a your education ambition so that he may assist you. Write a letter...
- E English What is a verb? pls make me the brianliest pls students i am here to help pls...
- E English Now, while the two were talking together, Pau Amma the Crab, who was next in the game, scuttled off sideways and stepped into the sea, saying to himself, ‘I will play my play alone...
- E English Please help look at the picture?...
- E English Which Two details from the text best support the answer to Part A? A. “the last time i was home / to see my mother we kissed / exchanged pleasantries / andunpleasantries” (Lines...
- E English Can someone please help me with this...
- E English Flannery o connor s a good man is hard to find is an example of which fictional subgenre? a. romance b. bildungsroman c. historical novel d. southern gothic story...
- E English The earthquake in haiti the earthquake was something nobody was prepared for my family and i were lucky to survive but it could have been a whole different story. so me and my family...
- E English How to do an introduction for an descriptive essay on your favorite restaurant...
- E English 1. if (were, we’re) going to breakfast, we should go now. (1 point) were we re 2. tell the server how you would like (your, you’re) eggs. (1 point) your you re 3. i don’t know if...
Ответ:
what you need
Explanation:
Ответ:
Although “Hills Like White Elephants” is primarily a conversation between the American man and his girlfriend, neither of the speakers truly communicates with the other, highlighting the rift between the two. Both talk, but neither listens or understands the other’s point of view. Frustrated and placating, the American man will say almost anything to convince his girlfriend to have the operation, which, although never mentioned by name, is understood to be an abortion. He tells her he loves her, for example, and that everything between them will go back to the way it used to be. The girl, meanwhile, waffles indecisively, at one point conceding that she’ll have the abortion just to shut him up. When the man still persists, she finally begs him to “please, please, please, please, please, please” stop talking, realizing the futility of their conversation. In fact, the girl’s nickname, “Jig,” subtly indicates that the two characters merely dance around each other and the issue at hand without ever saying anything meaningful. The girl’s inability to speak Spanish with the bartender, moreover, not only illustrates her dependence on the American but also the difficulty she has expressing herself to others.