Religious toleration is people allowing other people to think or practice other religions and beliefs.
When someone says they’re a theist and believe in something that you may think is absurd or crazy, you take them seriously anyway.
When someone says that they have to observe the Sabbath and will be unavailable, you take them seriously.
When someone politely apologizes that they can’t do something because it’s against their religious beliefs, with no harm to the other person, you accept their apology, realize they don’t mean to hurt you, and move on. (I’m excluding the case where this is being done because of discrimination or nefariousness).
When someone asks to eat in a restaurant that accords with their religion’s dietary laws, and this doesn’t negatively affect you, you go there instead of a different restaurant.
Lol, what poem? make sure you post the link
The answer would be <span>B) One of my sister's friends that she made in her college sorority are a doctor.
The subject-verb error occurs in the words made and are. Made indicates a past-tense event, while are indicates the present-tense. To fix the sentence, you could change are to is.
</span>One of my sister's friends that she made in her college sorority is a doctor.
Answer:
C). a desire to encourage people to become activists to eliminate inside.
Explanation:
The third choice most aptly displays that Wiese was motivated to speak out for the opened and victimured as he had an inner 'desire to inspire people to become activists in order to eliminate the oppression and tyranny they are suffering from.' Faulkner's key aim was to encourage the youth to gather the strength to battle all odds. Thus, <u>option C</u> is the correct answer.
C. The code
I don't have an explanation