Answer:
When justice holds his sceptre o’er the land
And rescues freedom from a tyrant’s hand
When patriot states in laurel crowns may rise
And ancient kingdoms court them as allies
While empire’s lofty spreading sails unfurl’d,
Explanation:
The correct answer is the first option “For an African, whether you were sent to the Caribbean or South America, you were now part of the sugar machine.”. Taken from the book “<em>Sugar Changed the World: A Story of Magic, Spice, Slavery, Freedom, and Science</em>” by Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos (2010), this excerpt best states the main point or claim of the text that the author narrates: the operation of the sugar machine. In other words, this could be the <u>thesis statement</u>. The rest of the options are <u>supporting sentences</u> that develop the actual operation of the sugar machine: how someone may be part of another group, how someone may work according to the ground, and how overseers supervise someone’s work.
Answer:
The tone or attitude that this idom (Juan is "caught ... with his guard down,") creates <em><u>for the character or audience is the one of "disappointment." </u></em>
<em>It was expected of Juan to always be at alert but he failed hence the reason why the incident happened.</em>
Explanation:
Answer:
The inference is best supported by these lines is C. Prospero uses bullying and intimidation to control Caliban.
Explanation:
The meaning of these lines shows that Prospero is threatening Caliban with doing painful things to him.