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OLEGan [10]
1 year ago
13

Why did Soviets follow Stalin so eagerly despite his atrocities?

English
2 answers:
boyakko [2]1 year ago
8 0

Because he manipulated his self-image and made himself seem like a good leader

snow_tiger [21]1 year ago
4 0


The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Soviets follow Stalin so eagerly despite his atrocities because under the Stalinist Soviet government, people benefited from some social liberalization. Girls were given an adequate, equal education and women had equal rights in employment, improving lives for women and families."
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Look at the frame from Iqbal. Read the excerpt from Free the Children. Iqbal knew what freedom was. He had showed it to others.
vova2212 [387]

<em>Iqbal Masih</em> was a very brave Pakistan boy who twice escaped the bonded labour he was entangled in. After his escape he managed to speak up and fight against these awful inhumane practices against mostly children in Pakistan. At the age of 12 he was shot dead in Pakistan but his legacy lived on and he inspired others to do the same.  

Question: Which is one similarity between the frame and the excerpt?

Answer: Both demonstrate that Iqbal had an impact on others after his death.


3 0
1 year ago
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Why does the grandmother laugh and talk? to entertain the almanac to hide her tears to entertain the child to make the time pass
mote1985 [20]

"Sestina" by Elizabeth Bishop  

In this poem, Bishop tells her own story. Her father died when she was a child and her mother never recovered from a nervous breakdown. Bishop had to live with older relatives for many many years.  

In the poem, the grandma feels sadness because of the whole situation and because of the innocence of the child but she hides her sadness by laughing and talking to the child.


<em>"reading the jokes from the almanac,  </em>

<em>laughing and talking to hide her tears."</em>

<em>-Sestina </em>

Why does the grandmother laugh and talk?

A. to entertain the almanac

B. to hide her tears

C. to entertain the child to make the time pass

8 0
1 year ago
Read the passage from Sugar Changed the World.
AysviL [449]

Answer:

Among the options given on the question the correct answer is option D.

They argue that extremely difficult conditions inspired enslaved young men to invent new forms of music.

Explanation:The passage is from the book "Sugar Changed the World" by Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos. This couple were inspired to write about the bitter lives laid in the sweetness of sugar. In the given passage there is a description of the enslaved workers of Louisiana where they were employed in the sugar plants.

They were forced to work in the hard condition of the sugar plants and most of the workers were late teenagers to thirty years old. They were selected as they were strong for work. The female were only give birth of enslaved child so the labor force can be produced.

This critical condition of the young enslaved workers inspired them to form a new kind of music to express their feeling which was Jazz music.This music gave them the ability to think more than their struggling life of slavery.

Same as the music Bomba from Puerto Rico, Maculele from Brazil were the invention of the people from difficult and harder situation. They found these musics as their way to express feeling.

So, the authors used historical evidence to support their claim by arguing  that extremely difficult conditions inspired enslaved young men to invent new forms of music.

3 0
1 year ago
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Immigrants like Bharati Mukherjee bring about a new perspective of what it means to be an American. Analyze her specific purpose
SOVA2 [1]

The author and her new family moved back to the United States to avoid any race-related provocations that occurred in Canada. After shifting to the United States, Mukherjee turned into a legal citizen of the States. Like a considerable amount of outsiders, she didn't get her citizenship for political or religious reasons. Rather, Mukherjee was a willful national of the United States. Mukerjee considers herself an American, not an Asian-American. Mukherjee proceeds to clarify how America has changed her and how she is changing America, particularly by voting, practicing her miscellaneous rights, and battling the differences. Further, she says that multiculturalism is one of the most indispensable attributes that shaped the accomplishments of the United States.  

America has extraordinary founding principles if compared to the European countries. It holds onto an idealistic heterogeneity rather than homogeneity. Mukherjee proposes another convention in her text that mocks over "<em>the upheld assimilation of the pot</em>" and "<em>the Canadian paradigm of a multicultural variety</em>”. All this detaches distinctive societies and stops people to put the benefit of their country over those ethnic values.

The ' "<em>us</em>" versus <em>them</em>" ' attitude is risky, as talked about in the essay, is another example from the text. These mentions highlight details of brutality against minority gatherings and legitimate workers which are additionally rebuked for social and financial issues. Multiculturalism is discouraged along these lines. Rather, America should consider itself to be a continually evolving "we". Several citizens are changing identities depending on their likelihood.

Mukherjee declines hyphenation since it is demonstrative of the American example, in which white is driven and ethnicity are minor, and she wouldn't like to be underestimated. This has made some Indian Americans criticize her. However, she centers herself around her present rather than her past. A few guardians are vexed that their kids have overlooked traditions of the country yet Mukherjee supposes it is alluring to give youngsters a chance to culturally assimilate and feel comfortable in their new land.  

Those Indian Americans who respond to marginalization by converting to be hyper-Indian, she advises to familiarize themselves with the lawful framework of the nation and realize the change that way.  

Another line from the text is mentioned below, which would rhyme the lucid idea of the author.

"<em>America changes settlers and they transform America. Arriving at a new location is not failure but expansion." </em>

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1 year ago
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Read this excerpt from A Girl from Yamhill. In the morning I descended from the bedroom by sliding down the banister railing, wh
Dennis_Churaev [7]
She feels it is safe and comfortable

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2 years ago
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