Scrooge locked the door and lit his dip (the Victorian name for a cheaply made candle using animal fats)
It was the Cratchit child named "Peter" who was reading a book when Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come entered Bob Cratchit's house.
False. The school that Scrooge and the ghost entered was described as a "gloomy building."
Scrooge was in their counting house (office)
No
Scrooge and Marley £¢€©℅
in his house and neighboorhood
The boy who stood in front of Scrooge's house on Christmas was a "solitary child, neglected by his friends." He was a poor, ragged, and hungry boy who wished Scrooge a Merry Christmas but was chased away by him.
The sign above the counting house in "A Christmas Carol" reads "Scrooge and Marley." It signifies the business partnership between Ebenezer Scrooge and Jacob Marley, two greedy and miserly characters in the novella.
Mrs Dilber is the house keeper
It was a Christmas party
Yes.
He told him to leave his counting house and keep Christmas In his own way as He (Scrooge) would keep it in his.