Character sketch of uncle khosrove
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Uncle Khosrove was a huge man with a large mustache. He had a volatile temper and seemed to be similar to Mourad in spirit. He was forced to leave Armenia and felt that his true home and a part of his identity had been stripped away. He felt a lack of belonging to the new land of Central Valley, California where the Armenians had settled. He possessed a sense of frustrated anger. He would often roar, "It is no matter. Pay no attention to it." Nothing seemed to be very important to him anymore and nothing was too tragic or urgent.
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Answer:
Uncle Khosrov is a character from the story, 'The summer of the beautiful white horse' written by Willian Saroyan. This character strikes as funny with his immediate dismissal of any problem with a "It's no harm, pay no attention to it".
Uncle Khosrov is the uncle of the protagonist Aram. He is notorious for his bad temper. He is highly impatient and set aside any problem without even listening to the details. When his son reported that their house is on fire, he shouted the same 'It's no harm, pay no attention to it'. Now it is a matter of debate whether this is because he is slightly mad or he is just bad tempered and impatient.
When Mourad, Aram's cousin 'borrowed' Mr. Byro's horse, so that they could ride it for a while, he was rather thoughtless and risked the reputation of their tribe for honesty. It made Aram wonder if he has inherited Uncle Khosrov's impulsive nature. At the end of the story when John Byro came to their house to complain about his horse being stolen, Uncle Khosrov shouted at him asking him not to pay attention to it.
All the same. Uncle Khosrov strictly followed the Garoghlanian honesty.
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