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masha68 [24]
3 years ago
10

What is situational irony

English
1 answer:
Nadya [2.5K]3 years ago
4 0
Irony involving a situation in which actions have an effect that is opposite from what was intended, so that the outcome is contrary to what was expected.
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Explain whether you agree of disagree about open book tests being more difficult than traditional tests. What can you do to bett
bulgar [2K]

Answer:

This question requires a personal answer with your own opinion. I will give you an answer that you can use as a model, and change it or adapt it as you please.

Explanation:

 This type of exam is the most complete and complex of all, and probably the one that you "suffer" the least during your life as a student.

As its name suggests, you can have your book and / or your notebook with you, to be able to freely review what you consider necessary.

As you can imagine, during these exams you will not be subjected to great surveillance, except to prevent you from copying answers from other students.

These exams can be tremendously difficult, which is precisely why teachers don't mind you looking at your book.

Your level of preparation for this type of exam must be maximum (although that same recommendation should really be applicable to any type of exam, do not settle for the minimum). Once this is achieved, the main advice I can give you is that you carry your book / notebook well organized, since time is limited and you will need to go to the information efficiently:

  • Underline and make marginal notes in your book, so you don't have to search a "sea of ​​words" for data.
  • Include models and diagrams in your notebook, if they allow you to use the notebook, to help you recognize ideas and their interactions quickly.
  • Use dividers in your book / notebook. These will help you find the topics you need to search without having to turn page by page, as they tell you before opening the book.
4 0
3 years ago
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Which is a central idea of gates mister jefferson and the trials of phillis wheatley
patriot [66]

This essay is an expanded version of the lecture Henry Louis Gates, Jr., presented at the Library of Congress in March, 2002, as one of a series of the prestigious Jefferson Lectures in the Humanities. In his analysis of the controversy surrounding Phillis Wheatley’s poetry, Gates demonstrates that theoretical issues debated in the academy are indeed relevant to the everyday lives of Americans. Gates, chairman of the Department of African and African American Studies at Harvard University, is a prominent intellectual. In his preface he states that the National Endowment for the Humanities, in honoring him by inviting him to lecture, acknowledges the importance of African American studies in the intellectual life of the United States.

His extended argument is crafted to explain how Thomas Jefferson and Wheatley were instrumental in founding the tradition of African American literature. An exchange of letters between a French diplomat and Jefferson debated the question of the intellectual potential of African slaves. The controversy continued throughout the first half of the nineteenth century and was a central issue in the abolitionist movement.

Gates has demonstrated throughout a prolific publishing career his mastery of a variety of literary genres, from personal memoir to academic critical theory. In this essay he writes for a general audience, presenting his argument in forceful, eloquent prose. He tells a compelling story, with frequent witty references to topical issues. Although securely grounded in his identity as an African American, Gates argues that the reading and interpretation of literature must be free of racial bias. Despite the explosive growth in the past thirty years of publication of creative works and literary criticism in African American studies, many readers will not be familiar with Wheatley’s life and work, so Gates provides the necessary biographical and historical background.

On October 8, 1772, Phillis Wheatley was called before a committee of eighteen prominent Bostonians who had gathered to judge whether the celebrated young poet was an imposter. The larger issue at stake was one widely debated in eighteenth century America and Europe: Did Africans have the intellectual capacity to create literature? At the heart of this question was the contemporary belief that Africans were a subspecies, existing somewhere between the apes and civilized humans. The confrontation between Wheatley and her interrogators was important. If she, an African, could create original literature, she must be recognized as fully human. Slavery, justified at that time by assuming the racial inferiority of Africans, would therefore be morally indefensible.

Wheatley had arrived in Boston on a sailing ship from West Africa in 1761. She was estimated to be seven or eight years old at the time because she had lost her front baby teeth. Although her birthplace was unknown, Gates speculates that she spoke Wolof, a West African language. She was purchased as a house slave by John Wheatley, a successful merchant, for his wife Susanna, who named the child Phillis after the ship that had brought her to America.

The Wheatleys’ daughter Mary taught Phillis to read and write both English and Latin. She was, without question, an immensely gifted child. In 1767 she began publishing her poetry in periodicals and broadsheets, poems printed on a single piece of paper and sold on the street. The public in both England and America gave her poetry an enthusiastic reception. She wrote primarily elegies and panegyrics, or praises for current events and well-known people. Her predominant form was the heroic couplet, pairs of rhymed lines in iambic pentameter, in the style of English poet Alexander Pope.

Placing Wheatley in the context of eighteenth century racial beliefs, Gates draws on the complex theories of such philosophers as Francis Bacon, Immanuel Kant, and David Hume to frame the public debate on the question of the humanity of Africans. He quotes extensively from contemporary texts to illustrate popular beliefs, many of which would appall twenty-first century readers.

In the light of this controversy, Wheatley was a disturbing... (this is a para. offline) not stealing just showing/helping  you 

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3 years ago
Why does the foreman not want to give John Henry a job at first?
Aloiza [94]
The correct answer to the question that is being presented above would be that the job is dangerous. <span>The foreman not want to give John Henry a job at first because the job is dangerous and it would be too risky for John Henry to handle.</span>
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When was Antigone written?
finlep [7]

Answer:

441 bc

Explanation:

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What type of conflict is the minor conflict in<br> this story?
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Provide a sheet screenshot so we can see the story.
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