Read the passage from Sugar Changed the World. Twenty-three years earlier, King Louis XIV had issued a set of rules that defined
slavery as legal in the French sugar islands. But when two slaves managed to reach France, he freed them—saying they became free "as soon as they [touched] the soil" of France. The judges sided with Pauline—she was real to them, human, not a piece of property. For Pauline's judges, as for King Louis, slavery far off across the seas was completely different from enslaved individuals in France. Which words best create a positive, hopeful tone? free, real, and human legal, rules, and judges King, individuals, and property islands, soil, and seas
Question: Which words best create a positive, hopeful tone?
Answer: free, real, and human
The authors of this book, “Sugar Changed the World”, the couple Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos went to research the background of the sugar trade after they discovered their family history in the sugar trade. In this passage they use these words to create the positive setting the slaves got in France, as they were treated as free humans there.
At times, he would weave arcane arguments to undermine the legitimacy of the committee. He knew there must be one eventually for in his life he had been a Master of arcane lore.
The children react on seeing the sun with excitement and they showed it by bullying a girl who has seen it more.
Explanation:
When the sun comes out after 7 years, the children are anxious and excited about seeing the sun.
But at the same time, they make a note of Margot and target her. She is from the Earth and has seen the sun more than they have. The other children, being jealous of her lock her up in a closet when the sun comes out.
Margot is also very anxious during the time that the sun comes out.