C- what was the reality of life for indentured Indians?
<span>QUESTION 1: B. The narrator’s mental condition.
In “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the wallpaper reflects the narrator’s psychological well-being. The narrator describes the wallpaper as resembling a broken neck and even mentions it appearing to be engaged in self-harm. The increasingly bizarre descriptions of the wallpaper correlate to the narrator’s gradual descent into madness. Therefore, it is reasonable to assert that the wallpaper symbolizes her mental state.
QUESTION 2: B. A sense of entrapment and her wish to break free.
The narrator in “The Yellow Wallpaper” projects her own feelings of confinement and her longing for freedom onto the figure she perceives creeping behind the wallpaper. As the narrative develops, she grows more dissatisfied with her situation within the yellow papered room. Eventually, she perceives a woman trapped behind what she sees as bars on the wallpaper. Since the narrator's desire for escape mirrors that of the woman in the wallpaper, it can be concluded that the figure she sees encapsulates her feelings of being trapped and her yearning to escape.</span>
The appeal to emotion; her parents emigrated from a different country, journeying to a new land. This emotional strategy would likely be the most impactful in this instance.
-Automatic
The fundamental part of the word is mat, which signifies "thinking, animated" from Greek, matos
Auto acts as a prefix meaning self. Ic is a suffix making the word an adjective.
-Gratify
The root of this word is grati derived from the Latin gratus meaning to do a favor. The suffix fy is used to form the verb.
-Unatenable
The root here is ten coming from Latin tenēre, meaning to have.
This term includes a prefix un, signifying not, and a suffix, able, which forms an adjective.