This question is about "A quilt of a country".
Answer:
C. She supports the idea that every generation of immigrants arrives with the same dreams and faces the same problems of assimilation.
Explanation:
In paragraph 7, the author shows that even if cultural diversity prevents the country from reaching a national character, it brings all immigrants together in the same story and still achieves American glomorization about overcoming difficulties.
This is because all immigrants, including those who lived in the country in remote times, came with the same dreams and goals and had the same difficulties to establish themselves and readapt to the new environment. This unites them all in a single concept, thus being able to create a national character.
This excerpt comes from the book “Danse Macabre” written by Stephen King. It is a non-fiction book about the influences that fears and anxieties in societies have on the development of horror stories. He makes a survey and analysis of several horror stories in the media .
Question: How does the excerpt exemplify the ideas King describes in "Danse Macabre"?
Answer: C. it forces readers to "grapple" with their own mortality
It's been a while since i read this, but one example of dramatic irony in this play would be that the audience knows that the old woman is the one that the man is looking for, but he doesn't realize it because he is expecting a young, beautiful girl.
Answer:
At the start of the book, Gregor Samsa might have turned into such an insect but it's clear when you pass thru the entirety of the series that the rest of his won't alter. Whenever anything and someone is going via a transformation, there must be an abrupt difference not just in physical attributes as well as from within.
Gregor may also have altered but he somehow decided to work and provide the food and money he required for his relatives. He realised that his family had been able to fend for themselves in his death as an insect since they can no longer rely on him to continue providing their wants.
Answer:
This broadside, "The Bostonian's Paying the Excise-man, or Tarring & Feathering," printed in London in 1774, is a British depiction of the Bostonians' treatment of a British customs officer, John Malcom.