Elizabeth Proctor is calling her servant girl Mary Warren a mouse no more. She is saying that with the new sense of power she is getting from being on the court, Mary is becoming bolder and more confident. She no longer fears what the Proctors tell her what to do. Like a royal member, she will do what she wants when she wants to.
Elizabeth refers to her sister Lydia as no longer being a "mouse" in Jane Austen's novel "Pride and Prejudice. This metaphor implies that Lydia has transformed from being timid and insignificant to assertive and confident, particularly after her elopement with Mr. Wickham, which brings her into the spotlight and alters her character.
baby mouse
A mini-mouse.
a mouse
becuase it moves and looks like a mouse.
Bats are mammals and in many languages, the word bat is replaced with the word mouse. In Russia they call the bat a flying mouse.
A baby mouse is called a pup.
why do they let illiterate people speak
The mouse on a laptop is often called a mousepad, trackpad, or simply a mouse.
a rat
I think it means that the call of the wild is calling Buck, and that Buck is answering it
No elizabeth did not have children she was what some people call her 'The Virgin Queen'
you call the guy you are dating your boyfriend