"Pip s visit to newgate prison in great expectation" Essays and Research Papers

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    Appropriate Pip

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    clinical context‚ but the initial PIP/TAZ selection as initial therapy was considered inappropriate for 55%. This is considered higher than the percentage of inappropriate PIP/TAZ use in benchmark studies presented at the introduction (10% to 17%). [7‚8] Based on the definition of appropriateness of therapy‚ 45 % of the patients included‚ PIP/TAZ was prescribed appropriately‚ whereas 55 % of the patients received PIP/TAZ inappropriately. Among inappropriate PIP/TAZ usage there was 50 % prescribed

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    In stave 3 Dickens introduces two children called Ignorance and Want who are described as: ‘wretched‚ abject‚ frightful‚ hideous‚ miserable.’ This list of negative adjectives makes the reader empathise with the young children as they are innocent and haven’t chosen to live this saddening life. Dickens also used the adjectives scowling‚ wolfish’ to describe the children which is describing them as wolves and monsters‚ indicating that they have been neglected to live like savages. Poor people‚ throughout

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    How Is Pip Alike

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    Pipstella "That was a memorable day to me‚ for it made great changes in me. But‚ it is the same with any life. Imagine one selected day struck out of it‚ and think how different its course would have been" (Dickens 75). This is an excerpt from Charles Dickens’ acclaimed novel‚ Great Expectations‚ throughout the story‚ readers follow Pip’s narration‚ a once coarse and common boy whose change in fortune allows him to become a gentleman. As Pip visits Satis House‚ Miss Havisham’s adopted daughter‚ Estella

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    Great expectations ch 1-7

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    How does Pip get his name? Where is he at the beginning of the story? Pip gets his name because his father’s name is Pirrip and his real name is Philip and when he was little he couldn’t say the name so he called himself Pip. At the beginning of the story he is at a marsh country down by the river. 2. Briefly describe the convict. What evidence is there that the convict has "human" qualities and is not merely a criminal? The convict is a fearful man all in coarse gray‚ with a great iron on his

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    1 Great Expectations " 1) “Eating and drinking are valued by Dickens as proofs of sociability and ceremonies of love.” Discuss the significance of food and meals in the novel Great Expectations." " Great Expectations by Charles Dickens is a bildungsroman novel following the maturity of Pip as he learns that the values of affection‚ loyalty and conscience are far more important than superficial concerns of social advancement‚ wealth and class. The conversations between characters

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    The Unlimited Miscreant - Trabb ’s Boy "A boy who excited loathing in every respectable mind" (Dickens 304)‚ Trabb ’s Boy is a lively‚ trouble seeking‚ and brutally honest character in Charles Dickens ’sGreat Expectations. Even though he appears only a handful of times in the novel his character plays a significant role. As Pips enemy‚ Trabb ’s Boy helps the reader see Pips faults. Trabb ’s Boy ’s most important role is that of Pips rescuer. Trabb ’s Boy has very few speaking parts‚ but

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    do Dickens and Hosseini present the influence of childhood experiences in their novels ‘Great Expectations’ and ‘The Kite Runner’? The influence of childhood experience is at the core of these novels as both of the main protagonists go through a rite of passage and change of character which is influenced by their contrasting childhood experiences. In Dickens’ ‘Great Expectations’‚ the main character Pip grew up in southeast England with his harsh and blunt sister Mrs. Joe who raised him forcefully

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    it.In the novel great expectations by Charles Dickens‚  Joe’s compassion makes him able to have a positive

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    Charles Dickens ’s novel “Great Expectations”. Many characters were treated differently because of their social class in the story. Seeing the contrast between how the poor and the rich were treated will give a clearer understanding of how much social class mattered. During the nineteenth century‚ British society was dominated and ruled by a tightly woven system of class distinctions. Social relations and acceptance were based upon position. Charles Dickens utilizes “Great Expectations” as a commentary

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    [him] in [his] grave‚ and [he] had contuma- ciously refused to go there." Pip is made to feel guilty not only for being so much "trouble" but also for his lack of gratitude. He is not grateful for his ill-treatment‚ of course‚ but is full of suppressed rage. During his sister’s recital of his "misdemeanors‚" Wopsle’s Roman nose so aggravates Pip that he "should have liked to pull it until he howled" (ch. 4). Another reason Pip is regarded as ungrateful is that he is not perceived as having any rights

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