The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "c. paying tribute." In Life in His Language, when Toni Morrison writes to James Baldwin about “the astonishing gift of your art and your friendship,” she is fulfilling the function of eulogy that is paying tribute.
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From forgiving people you open up so many good paths that people have changed for causing the future to be brighter than the past
I would say a fool. They are silly and come across a jokester, however they are clever and have a tendency to outsmart others.
Yes.
Of course there was. People at home were tired of sending the sons and daughters to places where the objectives were not clear and watching them come home in body bags. It was a very unpleasant time.
And who were the children in the body bags? Many came from poor rural areas who believed what they were told about the reason for being in Vietnam. Martin Luther King spoke about this though not often. He surely knew it. By then (Vietnam) it was apparent to the black movement that there were two classes of people and one was fighting for the other and getting very little for doing.
It was a confusing time when morals were coming from opposite points of view and both were correct.
The Black community saw clearly that the casualties involving blacks represented more than the 16% they represented in the general population and they were tired of things like the Jim Crow laws, which you can search out for yourself.
1818, as a term in church administration, "the holding by one person of two or more offices at the same time," from plural + -ism. Attested from 1882 as a term in philosophy for a theory which recognizes more than one ultimate principle.