The family, as well as the rest of the slaves of the Confederate
states, were decreed free by the Union, about six months after Ida's
birth, thanks to the Emancipation Proclamation. However, living in
Mississippi as African Americans, they faced racial prejudices and were
restricted by discriminatory rules and practices.
When Ida was sixteen
years old both of her parents died from Yellow Fever. In order to keep
her family together, Ida went to work as a teacher and took care of her
brothers and sisters. A few years later, Ida moved to Memphis to teach
where she could make more money. She also took college courses during
the summer and began to write and edit for a local journal.
hope it helps
Answer:
the 2 and the third one
i got it right when i did it on edge2020 but my friend picked the whole thing
just. this means she does things based on what is morally right.
jubilant. this means she is often excited, rejoicing. overly happy.
joyful. this is similar to jubilant, but means less celebratory and more happy.
why these words could be used to describe jane goodall: wanting to observe and be around the chimpanzees not only to end curiosity, but help people learn more about them so that this knowledge could be used later when learning how to protect them could be considered just and morally right. being able to accomplish so much and just be around happy chimps and know that people support what she did could have made her rather jubilant and celebratory, especially when learning new things about chimps that others had not known before then. she seemed to be an overall happy person, especially around the animals, and people have never really described her as a miserable person to be around. this could make her joyful.
The correct answer to the question above is (d.) The answer will be the same: school work <span>first—then</span> a movie. The sentence "The answer will be the same: work first<span>—then a movie." used the dash correctly, also the sentence was grammatically correct.</span>
Read the following excerpt from the novel Pride...