"I" (The narrator who has low confidence, because of her obesity.
The narrator's husband who doesn't really love the narrator. The only time he needs his wife is when he wants to have sex.
Lettie (The narrator's friend)
In her short story, "Disappearing," Monica Wood uses the protagonists' thoughts, words, and acts to convey the tone of someone who, ultimately, does not want to be seen. The woman in the story goes from being invisible (fat) to being highly visible (thin) to losing so much weight that she is - once again - invisible.
The protagonist is the woman who wants to lose weight. The original antagonist is her husband, who goads her into losing weight. However, when she starts trying to disappear via the water, she becomes her own antagonist.
Monica Maughan's birth name is Monica Cresswell Wood.
Some prefer pine or fir, while others prefer oak or walnut. It depends entirely on your point of view.
(it, she, he, whatever) disappeared like... Smoke in the wind A thief into the night Water in the desert Wood into a raging fire Hope this helps! :)
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glue or wood glue or wood
The three principles from my point of view are:woodsource for causing fire (as cigarets, lighter, ... etc)wood or other materials that are subject to fire (as cloths, curtains, forests, .. etc.)
An Aye Aye taps on trees to find grubs, then gnaws holes in the wood and inserts its narrow middle finger to pull the grubs out. From an ecological point of view the Aye-aye acts as a woodpecker because it penetrates wood to extract the invertebrates within.
A wood screw will have a courser type thread and will have a sharper point.
Well, honey, wood doesn't have a freezing point because it's not a liquid. It's made up of fibers and cells, not molecules like water. So, technically speaking, wood doesn't freeze – it can just dry out or burn.
You sharpen the pencil to put a point on it. Before sharpeners and when pencil wood was much thicker, men cut (whittled) the wood with a knife to make the point.