Answer:
Subject is hair, Verb is wake.
Explanation:
Hi!
This one's a bit hard to explain. If you want more, just comment.

Sentence:
My <em>hair</em> is knotted when I <em>wake</em> up in the morning.
Hope this helps!
-Sahkfam
racism
racism are complicated issues in The Bluest Eye. Unlike typical portrayals of racism, involving white hatred against blacks, The Bluest Eye primarily explores the issue of racism occurring between people of color. There are few white characters in Morrison's novel, and no major white characters, yet racism remains at the center of the text. Because the novel involves mostly black characters, "whiteness" exists on a spectrum. Race is not only defined by the color of one's skin, the shape of one's features, or the texture of one's hair, but also by one's place of origin, socioeconomic class, and educational background. "Whiteness" is associated with virtue, cleanliness, and value, while being black is associated with immorality, dirtiness, and worthlessness.
The mood changes from this outrageous romantic story because of how much they loved eachother, and how they risked faking their deaths for one another. Then it finally lead the mood into a tragedy due to their actual deaths, and how broken and connected everyone became in the end.
Answer:
Even with the lack of a reference document, the Korean War that was fought by communist-North Korea and US-South Korea was devastating because of the fact that many of the war-families were forced to split their paths.
Explanation:
Every war is a tragedy, people are unnecessarily killed in it is a tragedy, a war that ends with a pause where no one wins or loses something but their lives is also a tragedy.
The war ended on the 38th parallel, when the South was occupied by North Korea.
After 3 years and more than 2 million deaths, the front line still ended up moving roughly around the 38th parallel.