Answer:
A, B, C, and F
Explanation:
A because he calls him a savage.
B because calls him improved, suggesting that other Africans are below average.
C because he compares him to a dog.
F because he compares his hard work to witchcraft, which was looked down upon.
Answer:
C The author draws a comparison between the chemical transformation of Jekyll into Hyde and the real-life shift from ordinary person to evil-doer.
Explanation:
<u>The author tried to show the shift of people's morals into evil with the idea of how Jekyll and his chemical transformation into the evil Mr. Hyde.</u>
<u>Dr. Jekyll was trying to prove the duality of the people and their evil and good sides, but his experiment turned bad for him. In the end, he could not control his evil side anymore. </u>
<u>The author is trying with this to show how with doing more and more evil deeds normal person can shift into the evil-doer, and that there is no turning back. </u>
<u>There is no border anymore between good and the bad side</u>, a person can't just transform back, just as Jekyll couldn't control himself with chemicals anymore at the end.
Answer:
1. I wanted to sink right through the pavement.
2. I didn't want them laughing at Grandpa.
3. I stood up to take the bag, somehow knowing I should.
4. [I] put the sacred sage in my medicine bag.
Explanation:
The answer is A., “she believes that she has the responsibility to stand up for the right to an education”.
The diction of Steinbeck here in apparently describing the dustbowl conditions of the Dirty Thirties is speaking of "tenant men" or presumably men who were tenant farmers perhaps who were allowed to live on the land in return for working it and that they "scuffed" their way home indicates that the dust was so thick they had to scuff but also perhaps that since they could barely make a living under the poor agricultural conditions they did not walk confidently but scuffed.