Answer:
A. Enslaved people hold productive occupations that help society
C. Celebrating independence is hypocritical in light of the continuing bondage of slavery
E. Enslaved people, like all people, are moral, intellectual, and responsible beings
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.
Again and again the universality of human experience is stressed within the play. The Stage Manager himself is more than just a chorus; he is a universal figure outside of time and space because he can talk to the audience, the characters in the play, and even the dead in the cemetery. The storyline in the play has a very large universality. When people read or watch Our Town, they'll realize that this play could have happened anywhere, in any time, to any one of us.
-Pope attends a centennial exhibition and sees bicycles from Great Britain.
-Pope builds his own brand of bicycle called the Columbia bicycle.
-Pope works to make cycling popular
-Pope launches a movement to improve roads and paths for cyclist
-Bicycling becomes popular enough to influence the opening of bicycle repair shops.
C)the horses drawing the sun
Juliet is addressing the horses drawing the sun. She uses the words "gallop" and "steeds" to describe them. Also, in the background information provided, it says that Phoebus has a "horse-drawn chariot that travels across the sky each day." The sun is not a steed, nor it is plural. The same is true of Phoebus and Phoebus's chariot. Therefore, these options are all eliminated. The horses are the only possible answer.