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shepuryov [24]
3 years ago
10

Please help!!!!!!!!!

English
1 answer:
ArbitrLikvidat [17]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

i do not see any photo...

Explanation:

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How does this passage develop the theme "Evil can never truly hide itself”?
Liono4ka [1.6K]

The above passage is taken from a gothic novel ‘Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson. This passage develops the theme "Evil can never truly hide itself” when Utterson and Enfield are horrified when they see Jekyll’s transformation”. Jekyll believed that man does not have one side ‘but truly two’. He asserts that human soul struggling for mastery is a battleground for a “fiend” and an “angel”. Therefore, it can be separated by bringing the dark side into being.

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3 years ago
Which word uses the Greek root for "chief" or "ruler"
olya-2409 [2.1K]

Answer:

arch

The Greek root for chief, ruler, head, or leader is "arch". Many modern English words use this root in the same sense: monarch; patriarch; anarchist; matriarch; hierarchy; or archbishop, for example.

Explanation:

hope this helps have a good rest of your day :) ❤

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Write 2 paragraphs about Lorraine Hansberry's life
victus00 [196]

Answer:

Lorraine Hansberry was born at Provident Hospital on the South Side of Chicago on May 19, 1930. She was the youngest of Nannie Perry Hansberry and Carl Augustus Hansberry’s four children. Her father founded Lake Street Bank, one of the first banks for blacks in Chicago, and ran a successful real estate business. Her uncle was William Leo Hansberry, a scholar of African studies at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

Many prominent African American social and political leaders visited the Hansberry household during Lorraine’s childhood including sociology professor W.E.B. DuBois, poet Langston Hughes, actor and political activist Paul Robeson, musician Duke Ellington and Olympic gold medalist Jesse Owens.

Despite their middle-class status, the Hansberrys were subject to segregation. When she was 8 years old, Hansberry’s family deliberately attempted to move into a restricted neighborhood. Restrictive covenants, in which white property owners agreed not to sell to blacks, created a ghetto known as the “Black Belt” on Chicago’s South Side. Carl Hansberry, with the help of Harry H. Pace, president of the Supreme Liberty Life Insurance Company and several white realtors, secretly bought property at 413 E. 60th Street and 6140 S. Rhodes Avenue. The Hansberrys moved into the house on Rhodes Avenue in May 1937. The family was threatened by a white mob, which threw a brick through a window, narrowly missing Lorraine. The Supreme Court of Illinois upheld the legality of the restrictive covenant and forced the family to leave the house. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed the decision on a legal technicality. The result was the opening of 30 blocks of South Side Chicago to African Americans. Although the case did not argue that racially restrict covenants were unlawful, it marked the beginning of their end.

Lorraine graduated from Englewood High School in Chicago, where she first became interested in theater. She enrolled in the University of Wisconsin but left before completing her degree. After studying painting in Chicago and Mexico, Hansberry moved to New York in 1950 to begin her career as a writer. She wrote for Paul Robeson’s Freedom, a progressive publication, which put her in contact with other literary and political mentors such as W.E.B. DuBois and Freedom editor Louis Burnham. During a protest against racial discrimination at New York University, she met Robert Nemiroff, a Jewish writer who shared her political views. They married on June 20, 1953 at the Hansberrys’ home in Chicago.

In 1956, her husband and Burt D’Lugoff wrote the hit song, “Cindy, Oh Cindy.” Its profits allowed Hansberry to quit working and devote herself to writing. She then began a play she called The Crystal Stair, from Langston Hughes’ poem “Mother to Son.” She later retitled it A Raisin in the Sun from Hughes’ poem, “Harlem: A Dream Deferred.”

In A Raisin in the Sun, the first play written by an African American to be produced on Broadway, she drew upon the lives of the working-class black people who rented from her father and who went to school with her on Chicago’s South Side. She also used members of her family as inspiration for her characters. Hansberry noted similarities between Nannie Hansberry and Mama Younger and between Carl Hansberry and Big Walter. Walter Lee, Jr. and Ruth are composites of Hansberry’s brothers, their wives and her sister, Mamie. In an interview, Hansberry laughingly said “Beneatha is me, eight years ago.”

Her second play, The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, about a Jewish intellectual, ran on Broadway for 101 performances. It received mixed reviews. Her friends rallied to keep the play running. It closed on January 12, 1965, the day Hansberry died of cancer at 34.

Although Hansberry and Nemiroff divorced before her death, he remained dedicated to her work. As literary executor, he edited and published her three unfinished plays: Les Blancs, The Drinking Gourd and What Use Are Flowers? He also collected Hansberry’s unpublished writings, speeches and journal entries and presented them in the autobiographical montage To Be Young, Gifted and Black. The title is taken from a speech given by Hansberry in May 1964 to winners of a United Negro Fund writing competition: “…though it be thrilling and marvelous thing to be merely young and gifted in such times, it is doubly so, doubly dynamic, to be young, gifted and black!”

3 0
3 years ago
Streetlights should be added to the neighborhood to improve evening safety for pedestrians.Identify reasons that support this cl
Eduardwww [97]

Answer:

Letters A, B, and D are the correct answers.

Explanation:

Even all the options are related to a specific part of a city (a neighborhood), the written options are directly related to security.

In Letter A, readers can find shadows from trees dangerous since they get dark and they can find unknown people or dangerous objects that may hurt pedestrians.

In Letter B, the amount of people that walks nearby the indicated area is big due to the park and pool, giving more importance to the fact that there are no lights because more people are put in a dangerous situation.

Letter D is also correct because it means that the required founds to do this are available, meaning that just the direct action (the process involving the installation of streetlights) is the only required thing.

3 0
3 years ago
Select the best analogy.
Fed [463]
I would think the answer is C but I'm not 100% confident with that answer.
6 0
3 years ago
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