Answer:
its C The information text present a variety of case summaries from Marshall's career while the interview is based on his personal correspondence
I believe the correct option is B. <span>With multiple steps in the instruction manual, we were unsure of the solution when the wheel detached from the bicycle.
It provides the most details. The steps are not "so many" or "many" as in the other options, but "multiple" - which is more precise, as we know there are few steps, and not hundreds of them. Furthermore, it lets us know there is an instruction manual, and not just any kind of instruction. Also, being unsure of a solution is more specific than just not knowing what to do. Finally, this example specifies the context ("the wheel detached from the bicycle").</span>
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➷ Paragraph 1:
Douglass states that Mr Covey gave him "very severe whipping, cutting my back..." This line is great evidence that supports the mean idea as it shows how slaves are treated worse than animals even. The rest of the passage provides various scenarios, all leading up to the main idea. Douglass states that he has "marks visible for a long time after." This further brings up the inexcusable actions that were done to the slaves. Animals may be treated badly from time to time but the slaves were constantly victims to lashings of anger.
Paragraph 2:
(I don't have the actual passage so i can't give evidence sorry, just put some quotes in alongside it)
The hypocrisy came from the people who slaved to the slaves. Religiously, not many people agreed on it , however, it still thrived due to the different variations in the religious beliefs. People that appeared 'religious' and that were wealthy could do anything with the slaves and no one would object because after all they were religious.
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The central ideas found in Society and Solitude and Chapter I of Nature is, both passages stress the importance of individual contemplation.
Answer: Option A.
Explanation:
‘Society and Solitude’ and “Nature’ are both an essay written by the widely known Ralph Waldo Emerson. The former one talks about the notions of society and solitude, while the latter one talks about the euphony between humans and the natural world. But one idea which links both the passage is the importance of individual contemplation.
In ‘Society and Solitude’, Emerson suggests that self contemplation leads to enlightenment. Similarity in ‘Nature’ also, he stresses that one should get rid of the materialistic things and enjoy a pure relation with one’s own thoughts, with nature, and the universe.
Emerson addresses the individual contemplation in both passages as ‘the sublime’, the state of supreme being.