Warren Worthington III x Reader Prompt: “It’s a real shame nobody asked for your opinion.” Words: Requested? Yes!! It’s not like you hated Warren Worthington or anything, he was just hard to deal with. Like super hard to deal with, ever since he came to the mansion. He was cocky and arrogant at times. You two could never seem to get along, not even in front of your friends who attempted to soothe the snarky remarks that were passed between Warren and you, but it just never stopped. You were outside of the mansion, sitting on one of the many benches; studying for an upcoming exam when Warren took a seat beside you. You didn’t bother to look up, knowing exactly that’s what Warren wanted. “You look nice today, Y/N.” He tried. Were you hearing the boy right? Did Warren Worthington just attempt to say something nice to you? He couldn’t possibly be nice to you, you two don’t get along; no matter how hard you tried. …show more content…
Well, it’s a real shame nobody asked for your opinion, certainly not me.” You passed the sassy reply back, your eyes continuing to scan over the material in your lap but you weren’t taking anything in. Was this his attempt to be nice to you? Did you just ruin that? He shuffled in his spot on the bench. What the hell was up with him? “Listen- I’m just trying to make things good between us, you know? For the sake of everyone else that deals with our bickering
The Disappearance Do Not Write Here Have you ever heard of the Mafia? Do you know what they do? Did they do something to Hoffa? Do Not Write Here Jimmy Hoffa’s disappearance is still yet to be discovered as you are about to learn background. Hoffa was born to a poor coal miner in 1913.
What would you do if you had the chance to get back at someone who has wronged you? Would you do something that could ruin their life or would you turn the other cheek and forgive them and not do anything? In the novel Johnny Tremain, Johnny, a fourteen year-old prideful boy, is an apprentice for a silversmith. He is a hard worker, gifted and clever in the work that he does and holds it over the heads of the two other apprentices. He bosses them around constantly, is always getting on to them for the work they do, do not do, or do not do well enough, and never says a kind word even if they did finally do something right. All in all, Johnny was not pleasant to be around most of the time. When Johnny’s hand is burned, he is forced to find a new way to
In the novel The Things They Carried Tim O'Brien often brings up Jimmy cross’s love for Martha and how he struggles expressing they way feel feels about her. “Right then he thought he should’ve done something brave”(O’Brian 5) Cross felt much regret because he did not act on his feelings. He did not have the courage to express his love they way he wanted to towards Martha. Jimmy Cross, who had been in love with Martha for quite sometime even though she didn't feel the same way tried to play it off as if he had gotten over her.
Intelligence; an idea deemed as something everyone has, but completely unmeasurable. Intelligence differs between every person, and understanding a person's level of brain power cannot be done. Chaim Potok in his book The Chosen chooses to make many of his characters highly intelligent. He seems to enjoy seeing them have intellectual conversations. Reb Saunders, Danny, and Reuven are all very intelligent people, though they tend to be smarter in different ways.
It was the best thing he had ever said to me, it was the worst the he had ever said to me (antithesis), and all I could do was stare. He picked up my silence as his cue to continue, as he always did. “Yeah, that’s what I mean. You’re my best pal, Gene,” he said, as if to himself. “You’re one of the most competitive people I know, and that’s great.”
“The adults are the enemies, not the other armies. They do not tell us the truth." (Card 82) This quote captures the essence of one of the main points in the book Ender’s Game- and yet it, like numerous other parts of the plot, fans found cut from the movie. Differences in plot included character changes, added romance, and differences in setting. In character development, changes comprise of personality changes, less group development time, and less dynamic changes in characters. With use of detail, changes involve age discrepancies, lack of Ender’s genius, and liberties taken with setting appearance.
In “Where are you going, where have you been,” Friend (a demon) uses his “forked tongue” to manipulate Connie with his words to slowly convince her that she will ultimately give into him no matter what; even the first words we hear from him allude to the fact that he’s gonna overcome her, “Gonna get you, baby.” (Shmoop Editorial Team) Connie, a naive teenage girl in the 1960’s, has this concept that she will never like Arnold Friend, due to his age and his strange qualities; yet she knows that every single thing that Friend tells her is true, and she gets brainwashed to see Friend as her savior rather than her assailant. When Friend arrives at Connie’s home, Friend continuously plays music; during the 1960’s, “The Sexual Revolution” had begun, and the concept of “free love” was very present (Shmoop Editorial Team). The music was a different type of communication Friend used to lure Connie to him, even though, she felt he was older than her; the music can
If you had children, how would you treat them? Would you love and care for them with all of your heart like they deserve?(pathos) Mayella Ewell did not get the privilege to be loved and cared for like she deserved. Bob Ewell, her father, was an example of an awful dad, who raped, beat, took the little money he had earned, and used it towards alcohol, instead of buying the necessities for his children. He is a drunk, extremely racist, and on top of all that, a horrible dad, which clearly makes him the worst character from all of the books we have read.
In her novel, The Westing Game, Ellen Raskin’s viewpoint is that all people, no matter race, creed, ability or appearance, have equal rights to an education. She explains this through her characters. This can be seen by examining the characters of Sam Westing, Judge Ford, Angela Wexler and Turtle Wexler.
People aren’t always who they seem to be. In ‘The Possibility of Evil,” by Shirley Jackson, this idea is explored in story form. One character, Miss Strangeworth, is the literary representation of this idea; She is polite and nice in person, but at the same time, she anonymously writes hurtful letters that spread false rumors to the whole town. Firstly, Miss Strangeworth’s character can be analyzed by considering what she says and does.
“Bartleby is blind but he sees. The lawyer has eyesight but he is blind. Unlike Bartleby, he does not know where he is. He is in prison without knowing it. He has learned nothing. He has gained no insight into himself or into his society, and he has gained no understanding of Bartleby’s rebellion. He has denied his own capacity to love. What remains is only the sentimentality that emerges in his final words of pity and self-pity. “Ah Bartleby! Ah Humanity!” (Melville, p. 45) (Shulman, p. 22)
The book Hatchet by Gary Paulsen is about a boy, Brian, who had many struggles with survival after he was stranded in a Cessna 406 with his dead pilot who just had a heart attack. He had trouble with his surrounding as he used his intellect to prevail in difficult survival situations. Brian had trouble with blood-thirsty insects, chaotic animals, finding food and many more obstacles.
Imagine losing a job you have had for 20 years all because of a ninth grade student who was creating a disturbance in your class and told a bunch of lies. In the book, Nothing but the Truth, Philip Malloy is a ninth grade student at Harrison High School. During morning announcements the national anthem is played and Philip hummed along with it even though they are supposed to stand in a respectful silence. After he did it the second and third times he was sent to the office by his homeroom teacher, Miss Narwin, and suspended for causing a disturbance. When he told reporters what happened the word got out quickly. In the end miss Narwin got fired in an attempt to save the school budget and Philip moved to a new school. Philip Malloy is to blame
If Phillip Malloy had sued the schools the school would have won. There were plenty of witnesses telling of what Philip did, and plenty of examples of why Philip was wrong.
Melinda Sordino, the character in the novel Speak, written by Laurie Halse Anderson. She is an outcast, coward, and a negative person. Melinda Sordino is an outcast. '' Or I could crawl behind the trash can. Or maybe I could dump my lunch straight into the trash and keep moving right on out the door '' (Anderson 8). This quotation clearly demonstrates that Melinda is an outcast. She cannot even think a person she could sit. On the first day, Melinda gets into the auditorium and everyone divides into their clans. She used to be a part of the Plain Janes but now she labelled herself an outcast, she is clanless. Melinda does not see the point in finding her ex-friends. She knows it is not going to work. The only student talks to her as a friend is Heather, new to here, but she