Answer:
Cullen claimed that Hughes' writing focused on American life, but ignored the African heritage of African Americans and believed that this was a disservice. Baldwin, on the other hand, circled the simple language adopted by Hughes in his poems, which, according to Baldwin, presented weak, irrelevant and meaningless agendas.
Explanation:
Cullen, Baldwin and hughes were American writers very committed to the causes of civil rights and the difficulties that African-Americans suffered in a racist and prejudiced American society. Although both authors used the same themes, they approached them in different ways and with different approaches, which meant that they often did not agree with each other's work and form of writing, which generated many literary criticisms from each other.
Answer: true
Explanation:
There was a scene in the book nd the movie when they talk about this.
I think A. Otherwise you would have to wait some time for an answer to be written down.
Answer:
b. preposition (informal. They mean "around" Montreal.)
c. noun (thing)
e. interjection (something people from emotion like wow!)
f. adverb (describing how the person works: well... or not well)
g. noun (thing)
h. adjective (describing how the person feels)
i. pronoun (formal for "you in general")
j. adjective (describing the number of games)
k. noun (the thing that is being talked about)
l. adjective (describing the crowd, which is a noun)
m. verb (record as in the action)
n. noun (thing)
The correct answer is B.
In this passage from Ayn Rand's "Anthem", the narrator is exploring an abandonen tunnel made from an unknown material.
The narrator describes the walls as "hard and smooth" and "cold as glass". This depiction leads us to believe that the interior of the tunel is made of man-made concrete.
The narrator states that the material feel like stone but it is not, therefore answer A is incorrect. The walls are also said to be soft, making C incorrect as well. And there is no mention of the walls being wet, for what answer D is not correct either.