Ralph is descried in the first sentence of the book as 'The boy with fair hair.' The main reference to 'fair' is therefore simply to the colour of his hair but Golding chose his words carefully and Ralph's style of leadership, where he allowed all the boys, littluns included, to have their say was democratic and could therefore be described as fair.
Any test administered at a fair, such as a County or State fair can be described as a Fair Test.
Any test administered at a fair, such as a County or State fair can be described as a Fair Test.
The expression "fair go" is an Australianism meaning - to give somebody a chance, ie. "give him a fair go, mate" to suggest somebody might be exaggerating, ie. "fair go, mate"
Ralph means Wolf Counsel
What embarrassing thing does Ralph say to himself near the beginning of the chapter that he‟s afraid someone might have overheard? What does he mean by it? What change in Ralph does the act of talking to himself demonstrate?
In the Science Fair, 'constants' are things that remain the same in your experiment. For example, you might want to keep the temperature constant for the duration of the experiment.
No, equal does not mean fair even though it may be fair.
Something that is described as "easy peasy" is something that is very easy to accomplish. For example, some might think it's "easy peasy" to do 10 pushups.
expensive to build and maintain as they are above the ground there are always fair of accident
Rafael
what does expected outcome mean for a science fair
The term 'fair use' is open to interpretation. A mobile phone company might give you '...unlimited texts - subject to our fair use policy...' This usually means your 'average' use might mean sending 100 texts a week, and would be covered under 'fair use'. If you suddenly upped your texts to 500 a week because of an 'unlimited' plan - that could be seen as unfair use - and the company would likely cap your usage.