Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Detests her father

      • Because of his dishonesty and perceived self-importance, Matilda detests her father. He detests her in return; he doesn’t like Matilda at all and doesn’t care that she’s extremely intelligent.
  1. People also ask

  2. Mr. Wormwood uses up so much energy on himself that he doesn't have any left for anything or anyone elseespecially for Matilda. He thinks he's the big cheese, but honestly, he's nothing but a bad apple.

  3. Mr. Wormwood is Matilda’s father and the secondary antagonist in the story. He is a deceitful, dishonest used car salesman and a neglectful father. He hates books and learning and seems opposed to education of any sort.

  4. Analysis. Because Mr. Wormwood is a successful used car salesman, the Wormwoods live in a nice, big home. One evening, he announces that the key to success is sawdust—and it’s free. When Matilda expresses interest in the subject, he calls her “an ignorant little twit.”

  5. Wormwood looks utterly foolish, and Mrs. Wormwood shows her own vile character when she mocks him and laughs at his misfortune and embarrassment. This is a rare moment when Matilda and her mother share a common bond.

  6. Quick answer: In Roald Dahl's Matilda, Mr. Wormwood, the title character's father, is a terrible person and an even worse parent. He is dishonest, sneaky, arrogant,...

  7. This prank with the parrot, though, also fails to change Mr. Wormwood’s behavior. When Matilda puts hair dye in her father’s Oil of Violets Hair Tonic, she experiences a rare connection with her mother.

  1. People also search for