The excerpt that best does that is the following one - <span>I have ploughed and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me!
This part of the speech clearly shows that this woman did a better job plowing and planting than any man ever could, and that she proved them wrong by beating them at their own game. She wants to show everyone that women are also strong and quite capable of anything, and especially voting and fighting for their rights.
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Philip Caputo wanted the romance of war, bayonet charges, and desperate battles against impossible odds during the Vietnam War. hilip Caputo imagined himself charging up a beachhead, like John Wayne in Sands of Iwo Jima (1949), and this led him to join the Marines to fight in Vietnam. Michael Herr commented on the performance of `grunts' when they knew that there was a camera crew nearby and how they imitated the stars of war movies. So powerful were cinematic images of battle that soldiers acted as though they were on the screen according to Herr.
Raga is a piece of Indian music that is rhythmic and used spontaneously.
The use of repetition in the line "I sing a mad raga/I sing a mad raga/a glad raga...is being used as a sort of call to arms, a mantra, a chant for equality in our society. It is something that people could copy and easily remember.
The use of reception of the word is also a form of anaphora. Used before each new idea, it makes the idea itself stand out. raga of yellow/raga of mellow/raga of new/raga of old/raga of blue/raga of gold.
The last option is correct. The passage uses a specific example, but the main idea of the passage is that the systems in our body are connected, so laughter (because it’s a sign of happiness) can relieve stress and boost our immune system.
The correct answer is: The harrowing of hell.
Indeed, the main principle of Christianity is that the only way to be saved is by accepting Jesus Christ as one’s Savior. However, the problem of good people both Jewish and Gentile, who had lived and died long before Jesus came to earth remained. If they were good people, and especially if they were monotheistic believers in God, like Adam, Moses and Abraham how would it be fair for God to let them in hell for eternity? According to several verses in the New Testament, when Jesus was crucified and died, he went down to hell and rescued all these people.
A notable one is Peter 3:19-20: “19 in which also he went and made a proclamation to the spirits in prison, 20 who in former times did not obey, when God waited patiently in the days of Noah, during the building of the ark, in which a few, that is, eight persons, were saved through water.”