This question is about "Barrio boy"
Answer and Explanation:
Galarza is apprehensive about going to American school, but he was anxious about how he could learn English and become a proud American, as he himself says.
When he arrives at school he gets tense, because he thought that the teachers could be rude and that he would be the only boy not to speak English, but he had a very different experience, which helped him a lot to form a thought about the country in which he was living. First, the teachers were very kind and patient and taught him English very calmly. He was not the only foreigner and had the company of many friends, even Americans who helped him to speak correctly. Galarza then realized that this was a country that also had kind and solicitous people.
A. Fiction and non-fiction can have a persuasive purpose.
It doesn't just have to be one genre, you just have to make it interesting, to grab the readers attention. That's basically what persuasive means.
Answer:
The maid lived in a rural setting.
Explanation:
William Wordsworth's poem "She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways" mourns the loss of "<em>Lucy</em>", a fair maiden who <em>"lived unknown"</em>. In a three stanza poem, the speaker mourns the death of the "maid" who was beautiful. But aside from her beauty, she was humble and modest, and did not draw any form of attention to herself.
The poet used the adjective word <em>"untrodden" </em>to signify how simple of a life the maid lived. She "dwelt among the <em>"untrodden"</em>, meaning away from the busy and hectic life, literally meaning the less occupied place. And in this <em>"untrodden"</em> place, she was alone, with <em>"none to praise and very few to love"</em>. And when she died, there were <em>"few"</em> who could know the difference of her presence and absence from the earth. This shows that she lived in a rural place, where there are less or no people.
Answer:
<em>are </em><em>really</em><em> </em><em>good</em><em>:</em><em>)</em>
<em>btw </em><em>thanks</em><em> for</em><em> the</em><em> points</em>