Answer:
The first one is B and the second one is A
Explanation:
Answer:
A. A young girl enjoys playing games of make-believe with the dolls
and stuffed animals she has in her bedroom.
Explanation:
A conflict in a plot is defined as any struggle between opposing forces. Conflict the main deriving force of the story. Without a conflict the story will not be a story.
Option A has no conflict as there is no force opposing the young girl's playing with dolls and stuffed animals.
Option B has a conflict that the older man is not able to recall his experiences in World War II.
Option C has a conflict that he gets a flat tire but has to reach in time for work. The conflict in this case has already been resolved as well.
In Option D, the student has to work hard to impress Harvard, and become the valedictorian. This is not an easy task.
The answer is "He diminishes the importance of his past, reinforcing the idea that they are all Americans now." The excerpt is entitled "Give me Liberty or Give me Death!". This is all about fighting for the freedom of America from the British colonizers. This is to pursuade the listeners to fight for their country as soon as possible.
The poem Mirror by Sylvia Plath (beautifully) employs allegory, personification, and metaphors. But what can we infer from the title? The title mirror naturally brings to mind ideas of reflection. This is the purpose of a mirror: to reflect. The best answer regarding what we can infer from the title is that the poem may be about self-reflection.
Answer:
It provides background on how a family from Russia got into the sugar business.
Explanation:
The book <em>Sugar Changed the World: A Story of Magic, Spice, Slavery, Freedom, and Science </em>tells about the development of the sugar business, starting from its origins in New Guinea in 7000 B.C. to the 21st century and production of ethanol. An important topic in the book is a blood trail this industry left - the deaths of countless African slaves forced into sugar production.
This particular excerpt tells a story about how an ancestor of one Russian family entered the sugar business as a serf, a farmer bound to his lord's land, which he works on.