What tone does the phrase grave expression convey in this part of the story?

What tone does the phrase grave expression convey in this part of the story?

The phrase “grave expression” is used by the author when he expresses that there are only “forty eggs for seventy-two candidates.” This fact, along with the phrase “grave expression,” give this part of the story a (sad, gloomy, disappointed, serious, melancholy…) tone.

Which is the smallest dragon?

Keevan was the smallest and youngest of the candidate dragonriders. He was often teased for being small. Keevan enters the Hatching Ground with the other candidates, the eggs nearing their hatching….The Smallest Dragonboy (story)

Published 1973
Publication Order 3rd
Events

Why can keevan be considered the underdog of the story?

Why can Keevan be considered the underdog of the story? Because he’s not like the other candidates; he’s very small in size and is underestimated.

What caused keevan to get out of bed when he was injured and head to the hatching ground?

Keevan was bitterly disappointed that he was lying in bed, injured when the hatching began. However, he takes this as a challenge and decides to prove to everyone that he is worthy of becoming a dragonrider by “fighting against the tears that threatened to choke him” and getting out of bed.

What is the theme of the smallest Dragonboy?

What is the theme of the Smallest Dragonboy? A person’s value is determined not by his size but rather by his quality of character. You just studied 29 terms!

What are the colors of the dragons in the smallest Dragonboy?

“The Smallest Dragonboy” Riders

Name dragon color
F’lar Mnementh bronze
F’nor Canth brown
K’van Heth bronze
K’last brown

Who wrote smallest Dragonboy?

A Gift Of Dragons is a 2002 collection of short fiction by the American-Irish author Anne McCaffrey. All four stories are set on the fictional planet Pern; the book is one of two collections in the science fiction series Dragonriders of Pern by Anne and her son Todd McCaffrey.

How does keevan prove himself worthy of the bronze dragon?

This was his chance to show everyone… that he, Keevan, was worthy of being a dragonrider” (p. 128). Through excruciating pain, Keevan manages to drag himself to the Hatching Ground, proving that his strength was not in his physical size, but instead, his strength was within him.