Question: answer re state cite the evidince and explain it SchoolCity Student | Renaissan X G Based on the information in the x 2% student.schoolcity.com/student/Common/Index G
answer re state cite the evidince and explain it
SchoolCity Student | Renaissan X G Based on the information in the x 2% student.schoolcity.com/student/Common/Index G E2 CIP SCR The Namesake [1 Items] Guzman, Christofer 0 All Items Q - Done Save Exit Testing 1. II from The Namesake Excerpt from Chapter 1: 1968 Based on the information in the excerpt, what can the reader most likely infer about Ashima's husband? I had been after tutoring one day that Ashima's mother had met her at the door, told her to go straight to the bedroom and prepare herself; a Support your answer with eviden selection. man was waiting to see her. He was the third in as many months. The first had been a widower with four children. The second, a newspaper cartoonist who knew her father, had been hit by a bus in Esplanade and lust his left arm. To her great relief they had both rejected her. She was nineteen, in the middle of her studies, in no rush to be a bride. And so, obediently but without expectation, she had untangled and rebraided her hair, wiped away the kohl that had smudged below her eyes, patted some Cuticurs powder from a velvet puff onto her skin. The sheer parrot green sari she pleated and tucked Into her petticoat had been laid out for her on the bed by her mother. BI U SX > Before entering the sitting room. Ashima had paused In the condor. She could hear her mother saying, "She is fond of cooking, and she can knit extremely well. Within a week she finished this cardigan I am wearing." Ashima smiled, amused by her mother's salesmanship; it had taken her Q the better part of a year to finish the cardigan, and still her mother had had to do the sleeves. Glancing at the floor where visitors customarily Format Font Line Hei... Size H =Qe removed their slippers, she noticed, beside two sets of chappals, a pair of men's shoes that were not like any she'd ever seen on the streets and trams and buses of Calcutta, or even in the windows of Bala. They were brown shoes with black heels and off-white laces and stitching. There was a band of lentil-sized holes embossed on either side of each shoe. and at the tips was a pretty pattern pricked into the leather as if with a needle. Looking more closely, she saw the shoemaker's name written on the insides, in gold lettering that had all but faded: something and sons, it said. She sew the size, eight and a half, and the initials U.S.A. And as her mother continued to sing her praises, Ashime, unable to resist a sudden and overwhelming urge, : epped into the shoes at her feet. Lingering ring sweat from the owner's feet mingled with hers, causing her heart to race; It was the closest thing she had ever experienced to the touch of a man. The leather was creased, heavy, and still warm. On the left shoe she had noticed that one of the crisscrossing laces had mis missed a hole, and this oversight set her at ease. She extracted her feet, entered the room. The man was sitting in a rattan chair, his parents perched on the edge of the twin bed where her henther slent at night He was alighthe niumn scholar-lonkinn hat fill withful with black thick-framed alasses and a chain prominent noe A @ 2025 Renaissance Learning, Inc. All Rights Reserved O M 31 O US Feb 6 12:11 9 8