Public morality refers to moral and ethical standards enforced in a society, by law or police work and applied to public life, and to conduct in public places. Hope that helped :)
I think the answer is b because it shows how she is scared
Answer:
a) Marian encounters segregation, even when she is the star performer.
Explanation:
Russell Freedman's non-fictional book "The Voice that Challenged a Nation" is about a famous black singer Marian Anderson. Her life as a singer, even after she's become famous, and the racial segregation that she observed and also personally encountered, ultimately led her to be one of the prominent voices of racism in America.
In the given excerpt from the book, the narrator recounts one event where Marian was invited to perform in Savannah, Georgia. There, she saw how the whites and the blacks were seated in different sections of the <em>"Municipal Auditorium."</em> She saw the <em>"whites sitting in the boxes and dress circle, blacks in segregated orchestra or gallery seats,"</em> which is a massive indication of how the racial segregation still operate despite their star performer who is black herself. Thus, <u>the passage shows how Marian encounters discrimination even when she is the star performer.</u>
Answer:
Context clues. It is context for the conversation.
Explanation:
Answer:
B. Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky with hideous ruin
Explanation:
Allitetation is a literary device whose main characteristic is repetition of the same letter (or sound) in several close words in a line (or a sentence).
It's main purpose is to emphasize those words and make strong connection between them. As an addition, it makes the poem more appealing.
Here, we see "hurled" "headlong" and "hideous" used in the same line and all starting with the same sound.
For more information, that line is from John Milton's "Paradise Lost".