Question
Which statement is FLASE and did not happen in chapter 17 of Walk Two Moons?
Phoebe is worried that Mrs. Cadaver will murder her father and asks Sal what she will do, Sal says she will go live with her mother, even though she knows this is impossible.
Phoebe and Prudence are frustrated with their mother, Mrs. Winterbottom, because she is trying to help them with their problems. Sal remembers how she rejected her own mother's requests to spend time together before she left.
Phoebe finds a third message: "In the course of a lifetime, what does it matter?"
Sal believes that Phoebe and Prudence's problems are extremely important in the long run, and the they are treating their mother is justified.
Phoebe is worried that Mrs. Cadaver will murder her father and asks Sal what she will do, Sal says she will go live with her mother, even though she knows this is impossible.
Phoebe and Prudence are frustrated with their mother, Mrs. Winterbottom, because she is trying to help them with their problems. Sal remembers how she rejected her own mother's requests to spend time together before she left.
Phoebe finds a third message: "In the course of a lifetime, what does it matter?"
Sal believes that Phoebe and Prudence's problems are extremely important in the long run, and the they are treating their mother is justified.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The false statement that did not happen in chapter 17 of *Walk Two Moons* is:
**"Sal believes that Phoebe and Prudence's problems are extremely important in the long run, and that they are treating their mother is justified."**
In this chapter, Sal reflects on her own experiences with her mother and tends to understand that the conflicts Phoebe and Prudence have with their mother may not be as significant in the grand scheme of things. This contrasts with the idea that she believes their problems are extremely important or that their treatment of their mother is justified.
**"Sal believes that Phoebe and Prudence's problems are extremely important in the long run, and that they are treating their mother is justified."**
In this chapter, Sal reflects on her own experiences with her mother and tends to understand that the conflicts Phoebe and Prudence have with their mother may not be as significant in the grand scheme of things. This contrasts with the idea that she believes their problems are extremely important or that their treatment of their mother is justified.