If you need to make up a sentence so that it should have a parallel structure it means that the second part of the sentence must have the same pattern of words. It is needed to emphasize that both parts of the sentence have the same importance.
Alice worked hard to ensure that her presentation was <span>creativel, effective and persuasive. (the same structure - adjectives)</span>
The teachers like John because he never came late to the classes, always got his homework in time and was very polite to teachers. (the same form of representing qualities).
Answer:
Emmett Till is murdered On August 28, 1955, while visiting family in Money, Mississippi, 14-year-old Emmett Till, an African American from Chicago, is brutally murdered for allegedly flirting with a white woman four days earlier. Anne Moody wrote that “before Emmett Till’s murder, I had known the fear of hunger, hell, and the Devil. But now, there was a new fear to me – the fear of being killed just because I was black.” She remembered the first few days after the death of Till and how the murder affected her: “I hated the white men who murdered Emmett Till and I hated all the other whites for the countless murders [they had committed] … I hated [blacks] for not standing up and doing something about the murders.”
Explanation:
emmet till didnt deserve to die this case was very sad:( i hoped i helped tho
In this Poem, "Heat" by H.D., the speaker -from whom we don't know much- describes an Imagist poem - a really precise, tight and sonically dense poem. We can find some sounds repetitons -'heat' and 'rend' which are present in all over the first stanza; filled with alliteration (the first stanza in 'fruit cannot fall') and consonance (the third stanza in 'cut apart the heat'). All this resources create short, concise and pretty intense evocative images, which means that it doesn't have a regular rhyme scheme or meter.
The poem is not explicit about setting, but what we do know is that the weather is pretty hot. The speaker refers to a hot, humid and stifling environment which leads the audition to call on the wind for relief.
For all these clues descripted, I can asure this poem talk about and ask for 'a breeze' that, as I previously said, would bring relief to the hot weather.
The answer is 'D', declarative, because it is not asking a question, it is not exclaiming anything, nor is it suggesting anything but the facts.