Answer:
In the Chinese culture they like to show off their kids when they are doing good. But in American culture they do not do that. So she is embarrassed since she is trying to adapt to american culture
Answer:
B) You should always tell people how you feel.
Explanation:
Even though it may seem something difficult to do, especially to timid or introvert people, telling your feelings will always be better than keep them. By telling, you let others to understand you and keep missinterpretations out of the question. Also, it will help to <u>liberate the stressful weight</u> of having them inside.
Formal diction
Douglass's use of the words "severe trial" and "departure", as well as his sentence structure shows a more formal diction. He is basically saying nothing stopped him from leaving. However, he uses much more formal diction. Imagery is the creation of images in the reader's mind through description. There are no images in the reader's mind from this excerpt. There are also no elements of sentiment in the passage or subjectivity.
The answer is:
Having been taught to cook by her grandmother, she found most recipes easy to follow.
Dangling modifiers are words or phrases wrongly placed or separated from the word they modify. As a result, the meaning of the statement makes no sense, is confusing or ambiguous.
Answer:
B. War can cause daily life to change in a moment's notice without warning.
Explanation:
In this excerpt, we see the town of Hadjin living in peace and undisturbed by the war in Turkey. Men could meet in coffee houses to drink and play games.
But things change when a soldier on horseback visited to nail the notice on the wall of the bakery. Everything changed at this moment. The normal life in Hadjin was interrupted by the ensuing war coming to Hadjin.
In "My Mother's Voice: The Proclamation" , the author Kay Mouradian brings her mother's voice and experiences to life. Her mother, Flora Minishian and family who lived in Hadjin, Turkey were displaced and forced out of their homes alongside other Armenians. At this time, Flora was 14 years old and was attending an American school in Hadjin. Her father stow her and her sister in Aleppo and they hid there during the World War I. But Flora never saw her parents and brothers again after the war.