Answer:
The Talking Skull
Explanation:
In Donna L. Washington's "The Talking Skull-A fairy tale by Cameroon," the theme involves how you might be bothered by speaking too much about yourself and talking too loud. In order to teach the lesson, the author utilities the character of the talking skull. A man who sees himself as a philosopher and who speaks and talks about topics that are just essential to him, but who nobody else needs to know, discovers a skull. In other words, the skull responds directly to what triggered her death, "Talking."
Incomplete question. I referred to a similar situation.
Answer:
<u>D. a central character whose trustworthiness the reader is invited to doubt</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
We can make such a conclusion because <em>the narrator</em> in the passage isn't speaking from the point of view who knows about the community's history and practices. But is open to doubts from his readers.
Idk I can’t see how the text used it send us the sentence then we’ll know how it’s used
He uses different point of views
Authors would use as narrators when writing about the Cuban Revolution the following:
1. Cuban exiles who emigrated to the United States after the Cuban Revolution
2. Cuban exiles who fought against Fidel Castro
3. Cubans who stayed in their country after the Cuban Revolution
4. Cuban citizens who are loyal to Fidel Castro
5. Americans who are neighbors of Cuban exiles