Read again the first part of Source A:
Soon after breakfast mother sometimes began her beadwork.On a bright, clear day, she pulled out the wooden pegs that pinned the skirt of our wigwam to the ground, and rolled the canvas part way up on its frame of slender poles. Then the cool morning breezes swept freely through our dwelling, now and then wafting the perfume of sweet grasses from newly burnt prairie.
Untying the long tasselled strings that bound a small brown buckskin1 bag, my mother spread upon a mat beside her bunches of coloured beads, just as an artist arranges the paints upon his palette. On a lapboard she smoothed out a double sheet of soft white buckskin; and drawing from a beaded case that hung on the left of her wide belt a long, narrow blade, she trimmed the buckskin into shape. Often she worked upon small moccasins for her small daughter.
Choose four statements below which are true:
- Her mother was wearing a skirt.
- They lived in a wigwam.
- Her mother always did her beadwork after breakfast.
- Her mother cut the leather into shape.
- It was a cold morning.
- They lived on a prairie.
- Her mother was a painter.
- Her mother made shoes.
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