yes
The motto of Bernice MacNaughton High School is 'Qui valet sustinet'.
warm up
Nurse Marjorie - 1920 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved
He gives her different bits of advice, but the most important is to rethink her engagement to Darcy.
Marjorie doesn't want Bernice around because she feels Bernice is not modern enough...she doesn't fit in with the teenaged community as it is present in the time of the movie.
It is part of the falling action of the story: it is at the very end of the story, after Marjorie has trapped Bernice into a situation where she felt that she had to cut her hair.
"Bernice Bobs Her Hair" was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Bernice cuts Marjorie Harvey's braids at the end of the story. She cut the braids while Marjorie was asleep.
An example of situational irony in "Bernice Bobs Her Hair" is when Bernice follows Marjorie's advice to become more popular by cutting her hair short, only for Marjorie and the others to reject her once she is transformed. This outcome contradicts Bernice's expectations and the supposed benefits of changing her appearance.
In the story of Bernice Bobs Her Hair she cuts Bernice's bangs right before she grabs her suitcase and starts off to go back home. She cuts Bernice's braids while Bernice is asleep and throws the braids in the car.
Marjorie thinks that she is a modern girl because she dresses like one. This is in the book Bernice Bobs Her Hair by F.Scott Fitzgerald.
The most significant conflict in "Bernice Bobs Her Hair" is between Bernice and her cousin Marjorie. Bernice struggles to conform to Marjorie's social expectations and faces pressure to change her appearance and behavior to fit in with their social circle. This conflict drives the story's central theme of identity and self-discovery.
because she dress like one modern girl
The dog Hope I help
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's story "Bernice Bobs Her Hair," the reader is likely to view Marjorie's personality as shallow.
There are a few examples of an epiphany in the story. One of them is near the beginning of the story, when Bernice suddenly realizes how other people see her. Another example is later in the story when Bernice learns how Marjorie STILL sees her, despite her apparent friendship and help over time. That is when Bernice finally gets the backbone (which ironically, Marjorie has in part taught her) to blow Marjorie off and go home early, and then gets back at her by cutting off her hair. Not that I think revenge is a good idea, but it definitely in the story marks a change and an awakening in Bernice. She starts out the story without a lot of self-knowledge or understanding of the world outside her hometown, and although to the modern world her circle hasn't expanded a lot, at the end of the story she understands, and she makes a big decision to stand up for herself.
Advice has no singular form; the closest is a 'piece of advice'. Proper usages include: give advice give some advice give a piece of advice