Answer: 1. The plant that Mama keeps near the apartment’s sole window is barely surviving because it lacks adequate nourishment. Sound like anyone else we know? Yet she is completely dedicated to the plant and lovingly tends it every single day in the hopes that it will one day be able to flourish. Gosh. Sound like her behavior towards anyone else? This is by far the play’s most overt symbol; the plant acts as a metaphor for the family.
2. Hansberry writes about sunlight and how the old apartment has so little of it. The first thing Ruth asks about in Act Two, Scene One is whether or not the new house will have a lot of sunlight. Sunlight is a familiar symbol for hope and life, since all human life depends on warmth and energy from the sun.
Explanation: i read this a couple months ago its a good book
Answer: b
Explanation: because it fits in there
Answer:
Hey friend, heard you been having some trouble with people in class and such. I don't want to pry my nose into something that isn't any of my business but I just want to let you know that I'm here for you. Don't let what other people say or do upset you, just keep doing what you need to do. Focus on your career and keep trying to make yourself better at it, use that as your motivation to get through the day. With enough motivation and manifesting, you can be one of the best at what you do, just strive for better days. We are so young and still have so much life to live so let's keep on keeping on.
A is the right answer
<span>Try reading the first line of the stanza aloud a few times to help you determine the meter. Then think about the effect of that meter within the larger context of the poem: its topic, its images, and its theme.</span>
The correct answer is C.
These lines are an example of enjambment. We can tell this because the sentence does not end with the line of poetry but instead carries over to the next lines.
This is not example of a metaphor because the comparison uses the word "like." This selection, then, illustrates both enjambment and simile.