Answer:
I couldn't find online what specific narrative you are referring to but I can explain a little bit about it so you can figure it out for yourself.
Explanation:
In literature, resolution is the part of the plot of the story in which the main problem is solved or terminated. It is the stage that follows the falling action and is usually where the story ends.
During this stage the questions and mysteries that appear during the story are usually answered or at least explained. All full stories have a resolution, although the author does not disclose every last detail to the reader.
I looked this question up and was able to find two answer options for it:
A. Douglass and Jacobs both wrote important autobiographies about their experience as slaves.
B. Douglass and Jacobs both escaped from slavery in the 1800's.
Answer:
The main idea of the passage is:
A. Douglass and Jacobs both wrote important autobiographies about their experience as slaves.
Explanation:
From the passage, we can safely infer that both Douglass and Jacobs escaped slavery in the 1800's taking into consideration the year they were born. However, that is not the focus of the paragraph. Notice how the author compares Douglass' and Jacobs' lives, focusing especially on the fact that they both wrote autobiographies and became supporters of the antislavery movement. This is the main idea of the passage: that Douglass and Jacobs become authors and that they described their own experience as slaves in their books.
Some would be appear, arrive, come forth, come into view, become visible, surface and turn up. There are plenty more but the definition is <span>move out of or away from something and come into view. You probably have some words yourself. (Please mark as Brainliest)</span>
Answer: he was scared to get arrested
Explanation:
Listeners get to use their imagination from the sounds on the radio as exemplified by a program in the early '60's called he Goon Show of the BBC in London which was a comedy show with many sound effects like horses clopping which made the program very entertaining.