ILL MARK BRAINLIEST IF CORRECT!!!
WALTER (Bitterly) Now ain’t that fine! You just got your mother’s interest at heart, ain’t you, girl? You such a nice girl—but if Mama got that money she can always take a few thousand and help you through school too—can’t she?
WALTER: Yeah. You see, this little liquor store we got in mind cost seventy-five thousand and we figured the initial investment on the place be ’bout thirty thousand, see. That be ten thousand each. Course, there’s a couple of hundred you got to pay so’s you don’t spend your life just waiting for them clowns to let your license get approved
BENEATHA (Turning on him with a sharpness all her own) That money belongs to Mama, Walter, and it’s for her to decide how she wants to use it. I don’t care if she wants to buy a house or a rocket ship or just nail it up somewhere and look at it. It’s hers. Not ours—hers.
All of the above
Use the following quote from Act I Scene I to help identify what Walter's internal conflict is. WALTER (Looking up at her) See—I’m trying to talk to you ’bout myself—(Shaking his head with the repetition)— and all you can say is eat them eggs and go to work.
He wants to open a liquor store.
He wants to have another child.
He wants to be seen and valued.
He wants to please his mother.
Use the following quote from Act I Scene I to help identify what Mama's internal conflict is. MAMA I ain’t rightly decided. (Thinking. She speaks now with emphasis) Some of it got to be put away for Beneatha and her schoolin’—and ain’t nothing going to touch that part of it. Nothing. (She waits several seconds, trying to make up her mind about something, and looks at RUTH a little tentatively before going on) Been thinking that we maybe could meet the notes on a little old two-story somewhere, with a yard where Travis could play in the summertime, if we use part of the insurance for a down payment and everybody kind of pitch in. I could maybe take on a little day work again, few days a week
She is unsure of how she feels about the inheritance check.
She wants to honor her late husband.
She wants to please her grandson.
She wants to purchase new items for their apartment.
The plot of a story moves as a result of the conflicts faced by various characters.. Read the following passage from Act I, Scene 1, and then identify the conflict demonstrated in this passage. RUTH hesitates, then exits. MAMA stands, at last alone in the living room, her plant on the table before her as the lights start to come down. She looks around at all the walls and ceilings and suddenly, despite herself, while the children call below, a great heaving thing rises in her and she puts her fist to her mouth to stifle it, takes a final desperate look, pulls her coat about her, pats her hat, and goes out. The lights dim down. The door opens and she comes back in, grabs her plant, and goes out for the last time.
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External: Character vs. Nature
Internal: Character vs. Self
External: Character vs. Society
External: Character vs. Character
The plot of a story moves as a result of the conflicts faced by various characters.. Read the following passage from Act II, Scene 2, and then answer the question that follows. LINDNER (More frustrated than annoyed) No, thank you very much. Please. Well – to get right to the point I – (A giant breath, and he is off at last) I am sure you people must be aware of some of the incidents which have happened in various parts of the city when colored people have moved into certain areas –... Lindner’s comments make known a conflict experienced by the Younger family. What type of conflict is it?
External: Character vs. Nature
Internal: Character vs. Self
External: Character vs. Society
External: Character vs. Character
Characters are often revealed through the things they say and the way in which they say it (SPEECH). In Act I, Scene 1, Walter says, “ (Not listening at all or even looking at her [Ruth]) This moring, I was lookin’ in the mirror and thinking about it… I’m thirty-five years old; I been married eleven years and I got a boy who sleeps in the living room - (Very, very quietly) -and all I got to give him is stories about how white rich people live.” What do Walter’s comments reveal most about his character?
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He thinks his son should have his own bedroom.
He feels stifled and unable to care for his family.
He wishes he had gone to college so he would have a better job.
He blames his wife for the problems he is experiencing.