If Person 2 always lies, and they said that Person 1 always tells the truth, then we would have to assume that person one actually always lies, so their statement that Person 2 always lies would have to be a lie, so they would actually tell the truth... But then, that would mean that Person 2's statement that Person 1 always tells the truth would have to be true, and that would mean that Person 2 tells lies...
I don't think it's possible to come up with an answer with this... It's a perpetual loop of questioning both of their statements, and no way to find out who is actually telling the truth.
Yes, it would be a simile because if you’re using ( like or as ) it is a simile plus it is comparing You sobbed as if heartbroken.
Answer:
Like medals with their ribbons
a five-haired beard of wisdom
Explanation:
Answer:
This passage reveals that:
C) Slavery was a taboo subject, to be avoided in polite conversation.
Explanation:
Frederick Douglass was born in 1818. He was an abolitionist, a writer, and a social reformer whose autobiography "The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass" greatly influenced the abolitionist movement in 1845. In the book, Douglass tells the story of his life as a slave and the measures he took to learn how to read and write.
From the passage we are studying here, it can be easily inferred that slavery was a taboo issue in conversations. Even though it was a reality - and a horrific one -, people were uncomfortable when it was brought up. According to Douglass, "grownup people" were discussing it, but whenever he brought it up with white boys around his age, they were troubled, bothered by it. Maybe they were suddenly and sharply reminded that that human being they were talking to, unlike themselves, did not have any freedom. His life was set in a very different direction than theirs. Being reminded of that was probably uncomfortable.