Which evidence best supports the conclusion that the narrator is telling this story with a particular child in mind? “You can see when you go to the beach, how all Pau Amma’s babies make little Pusat Taseks for themselves under every stone and bunch of weed on the sands; you can see them waving their little scissors.” “But once a year all Pau Ammas must shake off their hard armour and be soft—to remind them of what the Eldest Magician could do.” “It isn’t fair to kill or hunt Pau Amma’s babies just because old Pau Amma was stupidly rude a very long time ago.” “Pau Amma’s babies hate being taken out of their little Pusat Taseks and brought home in pickle-bottles. That is why they nip you with their scissors, and it serves you right!”
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Answer: This is a paragraph taken from the story The Crab that played in the Sea by Rudyard Kipling.
In this story, the writer explains how the mother tames a disobedient baby crab.
The baby crabs bite because of fear of being caught and killed. The evidence that supports in this story is that it is the survival of the fittest if one has a disciplined life.
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