English, asked by ysrushti2006, 3 months ago

A. This was hardly what I intended. What I had meant, of course, was, that I
should boss the job and that Harris and George should potter about under my
directions, I pushed them aside every now and then with. "Oh, you!" Here, let me
do it."There you are, simple enough!" really teaching them, as you might say.
They're taking it in the way they did irritate me. There is nothing does irritate me
more than seeing other people sitting about doing nothing when I'll working,
a. What had the author not intended?
b. "Here, let me do it." What does it refer to?
c. What had he intended?
d. What irritates the author more than anything else?
e. Name the lesson and writer.​

Answers

Answered by ayushkum937
2

here is your answer

Explanation:

mark me as brainlist

Attachments:
Answered by Vigneshkr
0

Explanation:

tffggg sorry sir span didn't sleep sorry

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