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gavmur [86]
3 years ago
10

Identify the sentence parts by placing the red abbreviations in their correct locations. Put parentheses around the prepositiona

l phrases. Identify the subject, verb, and any complements (direct object, indirect object, subject complement, objective complement).
On Friday Esther showed the jeweler and antique necklace
English
1 answer:
MAXImum [283]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Explanation:

(On Friday)   Esther   <u>showed</u>    <em>the jeweler and    </em><u><em>antique </em></u><em>     necklace</em>

Prep.phrase + Subject +  Verb  + direct object  + object complement  + direct  object

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His extended argument is crafted to explain how Thomas Jefferson and Wheatley were instrumental in founding the tradition of African American literature. An exchange of letters between a French diplomat and Jefferson debated the question of the intellectual potential of African slaves. The controversy continued throughout the first half of the nineteenth century and was a central issue in the abolitionist movement.

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On October 8, 1772, Phillis Wheatley was called before a committee of eighteen prominent Bostonians who had gathered to judge whether the celebrated young poet was an imposter. The larger issue at stake was one widely debated in eighteenth century America and Europe: Did Africans have the intellectual capacity to create literature? At the heart of this question was the contemporary belief that Africans were a subspecies, existing somewhere between the apes and civilized humans. The confrontation between Wheatley and her interrogators was important. If she, an African, could create original literature, she must be recognized as fully human. Slavery, justified at that time by assuming the racial inferiority of Africans, would therefore be morally indefensible.

Wheatley had arrived in Boston on a sailing ship from West Africa in 1761. She was estimated to be seven or eight years old at the time because she had lost her front baby teeth. Although her birthplace was unknown, Gates speculates that she spoke Wolof, a West African language. She was purchased as a house slave by John Wheatley, a successful merchant, for his wife Susanna, who named the child Phillis after the ship that had brought her to America.

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