But that was not the way with the
people in Mr. Colburn's ghastly book.
They could never give you a straight
answer about anything. Suppose you
asked one of Mr. Colburn's textbook
friends the price of his horse. He would
reply that the horse and the saddle
together were worth 100 dollars. But the
horse was worth nine times as much as
the saddle. That was all you would get out
of him.
In this excerpt, the narrator called the people in Mr.
Colburn's book his "textbook friends." What was the
narrator really talking about?
A the blades of grass that grew in the spring
B the flock of sheep being herded through the town
C the people listed in the math word problems
D the number of days in the school year
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R E G E N I have a few minutes to talk to you about it
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