47.3k views
0 votes
A central idea of "Nameless, Tennessee" is that the town seems to be without a name, but with its colorful inhabitants and their histories it's not really nameless.

Which quotation from the story shows how this central idea emerges?

“‘Forget the durn Post Office,’ he said. ‘This here’s a nameless place if I ever seen one, so leave it be.’ And that’s just what they did.”

“‘You think Nameless is a funny name,’ Miss Ginny said. ‘I see it plain in your eyes. Well, you take yourself up north a piece to Difficult or Defeated or Shake Rag. Now them are silly names.’”

“Chronologically, the names had piled up: wives, grandparents, a stillborn infant, relatives, friends close and distant. Names, names. After each, the date of the unknown finally known and transcribed.”

“Some wanted patriotic names, some names from nature, one man recommended in all seriousness his own name. They couldn’t agree, and they ran out of names to argue about.”

User Eug
by
7.2k points

2 Answers

1 vote

its C i am 100% sure i just took the test and it is C i promise

User MgNobody
by
7.6k points
5 votes

Answer: c) “Chronologically, the names had piled up: wives, grandparents, a stillborn infant, relatives, friends close and distant. Names, names. After each, the date of the unknown finally known and transcribed.”

Step-by-step explanation: In that phrase the author express that a name isn't always necessary to give an identity, because this identity (in this case of a town) is really given by the culture of its population, the bonds between the people who lives there ("wives, grandparents, a stillborn infant, relatives, friends close and distant") and all the history that took place in that town.

User Bohumir Zamecnik
by
8.1k points