The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The author use paragraphs 30-31 to refine their ideas in the following way.
When Thomas Jefferson, who drafted the Declaration of Independence, wrote <em>"In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress..." </em>he wants to conclude that American colonists have tried many ways to get a proper answer from the British crown and the only answer they had received had been a repeated injury, which means, the King still considered aggressions to the colonists.
When Jefferson wrote <em>"...That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved..." </em> he is making the strong conclusive statement that from now on, the colonies are declaring independence from the English crown so the colonies are free and independent states, that have the power and rights to do the things they freely consider correct.
Answer:
Verb: Won
Subject: I believe it's Dalai Lama...
Explanation:
<span>As he looks back at the events narrated in "Shooting an Elephant," Orwell admits that he shot the elephant because he did not want to appear foolish or weak in front of the crowd.
Orwell realized that he had been compelled to shoot the elephant because of his position as a colonial military officer. With a Burmese audience watching, he felt obligated to shoot the elephant and uphold his place in the colonial system, even though he did not particularly care to shoot the elephant.</span>
The structural and rhetorical differences between Paine's and Henry's work is likely because both are coming from different geographical locations. Henry came from British area while Paine came from America. Paine tried to motivate and bring reality to America. He wrote a reminder how oppressive British crown is. Henry, on the other hand, used a similar base where England as the enemy.
The answer is: B) blurts out everything
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In the excerpt from "Sense and Sensibility," the author Jane Austen provides a contrast between the two sisters. In that respect, Elinor represents sense and logical reasoning, and is submitted to hiding her emotions. On the other hand, Marianne symbolizes sensibility, so she cannot help displaying her feelings and seeing life in an unreal manner.