Ray Bradbury wanted to warn his readers about the overuse of technology.
Answer:
I cant give an exact answer but I can give an idea.
Explanation:
A narrative is in the form of or concerned with narration/a spoken or written account of connected events; a story.
Some Ideas you can write about are:
- Times you've been judged by others and how you overcame that period
- Times you have seen others being judged by others and what you did to help
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Option A is a good conclusion for the editorial because it is hopeful and ends on a positive note. Option B would be completely counterproductive as it is a counterargument to the main point of the passage.
Option C is not correct because rhetorical questions are not accepted in editorials or other forms of formal writing. Option D does not work because it contains a basic and crudely drafted opinion along with a grammatical error.
According to <em>"The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain"</em>, one powerful way that the standard of whiteness affects African Americans is through the unconscious.
In the poem, the author states this idea very well at the beginnig of the poem when he says: <em>"...I want to be a poet, not a Negro poet..." </em>One can interpret that the poet has a conscious desire to be white or an unconscious desire not to be black.
The use of whiteness as a standard of beauty and wellness is another powerful way to impact African Americans.
<em>Langston Hughes</em> wrote "The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain" in 1926.
In the poem, Hughes wrote about the lives of Black People in Balck neighbourhoods in the United States.
Answer:
Idiom
Explanation:
As nouns the difference between idiom and euphemism is that idiom is a manner of speaking, a way of expressing oneself while euphemism is (uncountable) the use of a word or phrase to replace another with one that is considered less offensive, blunt or vulgar than the word or phrase it replaces.
Example:
Instead of using
You're just a *****
you would use
You're just a scaredy-cat.
That would be a euphemism