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Zolol [24]
3 years ago
5

Jomo Kenyatta and Nnamdi Azikiwe were leaders of the anticolonial movement in

History
2 answers:
Tamiku [17]3 years ago
8 0
The correct answer is A because <span>Jomo Kenyatta and Nnamdi Azikiwe where leaders in Africa
</span>
liberstina [14]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Answer:A

Explanation:

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What about Constantinople's location made it an ideal capital of the Byzantine Empire?
lys-0071 [83]
Out of all the things that made Constantinople an ideal location or a capital, it was its location on the Mediterranean Sea that was the most beneficial, since this allowed its trading opportunities with other nations to increase dramatically. 
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4 years ago
Match each agreement to its description. Tiles Munich Agreement Pact of Steel Lend-Lease Act Tripartite Pact Pairs an agreement
S_A_V [24]
Tripartite - an alliance between Italy, Japan, and Germany that formalized them as the Axis powers
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3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What event provoked the South Carolina Exposition and Protest?
STALIN [3.7K]

Answer/Explanation

The document was a protest against the Tariff of 1828, also known as the Tariff of Abominations. It stated also Calhoun's Doctrine of nullification, i.e., the idea that a state has the right to reject federal law, first introduced by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison in their Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions.

8 0
3 years ago
Which best identifies the event that renews hope in the secret annex
konstantin123 [22]

The correct answer is the D-day.

The Secret Annex was the space, at the back of a Dutch canal house in Amsterdam, where Anne Frank and her family hid for years during the Nazi occupation, together with another Jewish family.

Hope was brought by the information which arrived there about the D-day, when the Normandy landings took place, which meant the arrival of the Allied forces to the occupied French territory. It happened on June, 1944. It was a crucial military operation in the defeat of the Nazis in mainland Europe.

Anne and the rest of the people hidden were arrested by the Nazis in August 1944 and sent to concentration camps where all died, except Anne's father, Otto Frank. <em>Therefore the answer option which mentions the end of the Nazi occupation in Amsterdam cannot be true. </em>

<em>Secondly, there was no one called Eli in the annex. The event with the burglars was totally different. They were scared because they thought the burglars might see them, but in the end that did not happen. </em>



3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
how can we interpret and compare speeches from president lincoln and Obama, and from Frederick Douglass, to help us analyze the
zavuch27 [327]

Answer:

I have a short article included to help.

Explanation:

Frederick Douglass’s 1845 Narrative continues to be a popular pedagogical text for high school and college curricula for the didactic reason that Douglass is a strong advocate for the benefits of reading and writing. Responding to the rumor that he might have been a well-educated freeman masquerading as a runaway slave, the educational elements of Douglass’s autobiography were partially intended to explain the source of his eloquence—tracing his beginning lessons in penmanship with neighborhood boys in Baltimore to his clandestine reading of The Columbian Orator. By including the letter he forged in his first escape attempt, he implies the message that literacy set him free. Setting a precedent for many African American literary figures who came after him, including Ralph Ellison’s fictionalized Invisible Man and the real-life President Barack Obama, Douglass fashioned a compelling explanation of his coming-to-voice, which even competes with, and eventually eclipses, the drama of his escape in the book’s final chapters.

One of the most dramatic emblems of Douglass’s literary education is the moment he becomes moved to address the ships on the Chesapeake Bay—it is a picture in words of his oratorical birth. In William Lloyd Garrison’s preface to Frederick Douglass’s 1845 Narrative, he celebrates the theatrical scene: Reduced to total abjection by the brutality of his slavemaster Covey, Douglass retreats to the Chesapeake shore on Sunday, and gives a moving speech to the white-sailed ships on the horizon. Performing as if he were on stage, Douglass laments his misery, questions whether there is a God, and concludes that since Covey is probably going to kill him anyway, he might as well try to escape. According to Garrison, Douglass’s oratorical tableau is the visual and literary epitome of the basic human desire for freedom—a “whole Alexandrine library of thought, feeling, and sentiment” (7). Like Garrison’s investment in The Liberator’s 1850 masthead, adapting Josiah Wedgwood’s image of a shackled and kneeling slave asking, “Am I not a man and a brother?,” Garrison points Douglass’s readers to this moving portrait of suffering with the hope that they, too, will vicariously experience the slave’s resolution for freedom.1 Although Garrison seems to have hoped that the scene would principally inspire sympathy for Douglass among his white readers, in Douglass’s hands it also turns into a representation of literary agency with lasting significance for African American literature. Douglass’s figure of himself—embodied in words—as communicating with the nation is echoed in similar moments of coming-to-voice in African American literary figures to the present day, and has become one of the most enduring elements of his rhetorical legacy.

Douglass’s waterside speech is a curiously artistic milestone in antislavery testimony even beyond its anguished desperation. Garrison might have pointed to many other dramatic passages—such as the whipping of Aunt Hester, the slave auction, the abandonment of Douglass’s grandmother, or even the fight with Covey—but he chose instead to highlight this highly literary, if not overwrought, transformational moment in Douglass’s consciousness. In his essay on the aesthetic elements of Douglass’s Narrative, written over forty years ago, Albert Stone argued this speech was an expression of Douglass’s artistic impulses to imaginatively synthesize his thought processes concerning freedom (72).2 But put more bluntly, he might have admitted that Douglass probably never gave this speech at all. Part of what makes Douglass’s first autobiography so effective is his ability to blend his largely factual account of slavery so seamlessly with the inventions of art. Like his deliberately falsified account of his grandmother’s abandonment and death, whose purple passages remained in his autobiographies even after he admitted that they were not true, Douglass’s speech is one of the more glaring examples of his departure from conventional fact in telling his story

6 0
3 years ago
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