The Rumble
it represents conflict between the socs and greasers
The conflict between the Greasers and the Socs in the book The Outsiders is that Socs and Greasers disliked and hated each other. The Socs jumped greasers and wreck houses and throw beer blasts for kicks. Greasers are like hoods they steal things and drive up old souped-up cars and hold up gas stations and have gang fight once in a while. The Socs were West-side rich kids. The term "greaser" , is used to class all the boys on the East side.
In the novel "The Outsiders" by S.E. Hinton, there were seven Socs present at the rumble. The Socs were the wealthy, privileged social group in the story, known for their rivalry with the Greasers. The rumble was a physical fight between the Greasers and the Socs, organized to settle their ongoing conflict. The Socs outnumbered the Greasers, but the Greasers ultimately emerged victorious in the rumble.
The rumble in which the Greasers fought the socs and won.
i think it was the greasers and soches (like social)
it represents conflict between the socs and greasers
The conflict between the Greasers and the Socs in the book The Outsiders is that Socs and Greasers disliked and hated each other. The Socs jumped greasers and wreck houses and throw beer blasts for kicks. Greasers are like hoods they steal things and drive up old souped-up cars and hold up gas stations and have gang fight once in a while. The Socs were West-side rich kids. The term "greaser" , is used to class all the boys on the East side.
In the novel "The Outsiders" by S.E. Hinton, there were seven Socs present at the rumble. The Socs were the wealthy, privileged social group in the story, known for their rivalry with the Greasers. The rumble was a physical fight between the Greasers and the Socs, organized to settle their ongoing conflict. The Socs outnumbered the Greasers, but the Greasers ultimately emerged victorious in the rumble.
The rumble in which the Greasers fought the socs and won.
The rivalry between the greasers and the socs in the 1950s was fueled by socioeconomic differences, with the greasers coming from working-class backgrounds and the socs being more affluent. Differences in appearance, behavior, and social status further deepened the conflict between the two groups depicted in S. E. Hinton's novel "The Outsiders."
To end all the feuds between the greasers and the Socs.
i think it was the greasers and soches (like social)
Fitting into Gang Life.
No, its just been that way for ages. Socs have always hated greasers and greasers have always hated Socs. There's no way to stop it.
The climax is when Johnny, and Ponyboy went into the Church while it was on fire to save the kids and Dally helps them outside of the church and then Johnny gets hit with a burning beam. Although at the end of the book, he eventually dies.The answer above is false. How does that solve the basic conflict? A climax of a story is the solution to the basic conflict. The climax of The Outsiders is the rumble between the Socs and the Greasers. The conflict is between the Greasers and the Socs. How at the begining of the book, the Socs jumped the Greasers.no your false. what your talking about is the resolution not the climax.Both are wrong. The MAIN conflict of this story is the internal struggle of Ponyboy, and his coming of age. The conflict between the socs and the greasers only propels the story forward in the main conflict, but the actual conflict could be between the greasers and anyone. The big problem is Ponyboys need to discover himself. The climax is when Johnny dies, and everything is resolved directly afterwards.the one about the church is correct. the rumble part is the falling action + johnny dies.The answers about me are confusing. I don't know which one is the right answer.
They hope for it to end the rivalry between the greasers and Socs.
The Socs challenged the Greasers The Socs challenged the Greasers