"The Witches' Loaves" by O. Henry primarily focuses on one conflict, which is the internal struggle faced by the main character as she deals with her guilt over selling day-old loaves as fresh. This conflict drives the plot and reveals the character's moral dilemma.
There is no one set answer to this- but I would make a guess. Things that are "bewitched" sometimes would have results that you did not expect. In a similar manner, the lady at the bakery thought that buttering the bread would have one effect, when it had another effect entirely.
The dangers of curiosity and prejudgment
Depends on how many pieces you cut the loaves in.
no
Loaves has one syllable.
three loaves, to fish
84
It depends on your specific recipe and the size of the loaves you're baking, but you can make about 4 loaves of bread.
79 and 1/2 loaves of bread each year
What Witches Do has 223 pages.
4350
The company uses 20 loaves of bread to feed 50 workers. So, to find out how many loaves of bread are needed for 80 workers, we can set up the proportion: 20 loaves / 50 workers = x loaves / 80 workers To solve for x (the number of loaves needed for 80 workers), we can cross-multiply and then divide: 20 * 80 = 50 * x 1600 = 50x Now, divide both sides by 50 to isolate x: x = 1600 / 50 x = 32 So, you would need 32 loaves of bread to feed 80 workers.
The Witches of Karres has 202 pages.
The Witches of Eastwick has 320 pages.