Q2. How did Miss. Havisham appear to Pip when he first met her?
Q3 What more did Pip notice as he surveyed the room? 04. Describe the room that Pip was escorted to one week later. Q5. To what did Miss. Havisham draw Pip's attention? What was special about that day? How did Miss. Havisham behave?
Answers
Answer:
2) Pip's first meeting with Miss Havisham is one of the most startling passages in the novel. It is told by different, but intermingled voices, those of the "young" Pip and the "adult" Pip. We see Miss Havisham through both pairs of eyes. To the young Pip, she is a frightening witchlike creature, living in a darkened room around the the mouldering remains of her wedding cake and still dressed in her yellowing wedding gown. The "young Pip" can only put this startling woman within the context of a "ghastly waxworks" he has seen. He finds her inhuman and frightening.
3) After coming into the dressing-room of Miss Havisham, Pip is halted by the appearance of "the strangest lady [he has] ever seen or shall ever see." He notices that "everything within [his] view which ought to be white had lost its luster, and was faded and yellow." And, as he looks around him, Pip notices that Miss Havisham's watch has stopped at twenty minutes to nine; in fact a clock in the room was also stopped at this same time. It is then that Pip comprehends that everything has stopped at this time. Miss Havisham has one shoe off and there is a jewel resting upon her dressing-table. She remains in a wedding dress that has yellowed now.
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answer
Explanation:
1)a.alkali: a compound with particular chemical properties including turning litmus blue and neutralizing or effervescing with acids; typically, a caustic or corrosive substance of this kind such as lime or soda.
b) malleability : quality or state of being malleable: such as. a : capability of being shaped or extended by hammering, forging, etc. the malleability of tin. b : capability of being influenced or altered by external forces The malleability of memory …
c)Ductility: the ability of a material to be drawn or plastically deformed without fracture. It is therefore an indication of how 'soft' or malleable the material is. The ductility of steels varies depending on the types and levels of alloying elements present.
d)An aqueous solution : a solution in which the solvent is water. It is mostly shown in chemical equations by appending to the relevant chemical formula. For example, a solution of table salt, or sodium chloride, in water would be represented as Na+ + Cl−
2)Sodium is kept in kerosene because it is a highly reactive metal. If it is kept in an open container, it will react with oxygen and water vapor present in the atmosphere producing sodium oxides and sodium hydroxides respectively which is a highly exothermic reaction.
3)When magnesium reacts with oxygen, it produces light bright enough to blind you temporarily. Magnesium burns so bright because the reaction releases a lot of heat. As a result of this exothermic reaction, magnesium gives two electrons to oxygen, forming powdery magnesium oxide (MgO).
4)Two of the non metals show lustre they are diamond and Iodine. So we can conclude that Iodine is a lustrous non-metal
5)When an acid reacts with metal, a salt and hydrogen are produced.
acid + metal → salt + H2
5) The iron reacts with water and oxygen to form hydrated iron(III) oxide, which we see as rust. Iron and steel rust when they come into contact with water and oxygen – both are needed for rusting to occur. ... Salt dissolved in water does not cause rusting, but it does speed it up – as does acid rain.
The equation is given below: Fe+O2+H2O→Fe2O3