Answer:
The line in the above excerpt from Amy Tan's "Mother Tongue" that shows that Tan changes her language depending on the audience is: “The talk was about my writing, my life, and my book, The Joy Luck Club, and it was going along well enough, until I remembered one major difference that made the whole talk sound wrong. My mother was in the room.”
Explanation:
There is no passage here. Question cannot be answered.
The answer to the question :
How does Dr. Jekyll’s letter move the plot forward?
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon goes to Dr. Jekyll’s
house and argues with him.
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon forms a plan with Mr.
Utterson to help Dr. Jekyll.
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon reports Dr. Jekyll to
the police.
After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon breaks into Dr.
Jekyll’s cabinet and takes his drawer.
Is:
<span>After reading the letter, Dr. Lanyon breaks into Dr. Jekyll’s cabinet and takes his drawer.</span>
Answer:
Both passages use evidence to show that knowledge of the extreme brutality of the sugar trade changed viewpoints about enslavement.
Explanation:
The author's main idea is the fact that sugar, even though it had caused all the atrocities it had caused, changed people's impressions of slavery.
All this was due to the fact that with the Age of Sugar, slavery became brutal as ever. And people were noticing it. Lemerre Younger was the first one to protest, declaring <em>equal rights for all</em>. And it -
<em>began to spread — toppling kings, overturning governments, transforming the entire world</em>.
In the second passage, the authors show how Clarkson and the abolitionists fought their fights. It was all about making things <em>public</em><em>, </em>educating the blind. By helping people understand and see the reality of the slave trade, they started a revolution in people's opinion. One was no longer indifferent after <em>Clarkson's speeches and the testimonials he published</em>. The people rose against the torture.