Answer:
Being obligated to someone or something means you made a commitment or you feel compelled to do something for someone, as an example Mike made plans with Sarah he didn't want to go but he felt obligated to go since he had already made a commitment.
My answer is far from perfect but hope it helps!
░░░░░▐▀█▀▌░░░░▀█▄░░░
░░░░░▐█▄█▌░░░░░░▀█▄░░
░░░░░░▀▄▀░░░▄▄▄▄▄▀▀░░
░░░░▄▄▄██▀▀▀▀░░░░░░░
░░░█▀▄▄▄█░▀▀░░
░░░▌░▄▄▄▐▌▀▀▀░░ This is Bob
▄░▐░░░▄▄░█░▀▀ ░░
▀█▌░░░▄░▀█▀░▀ ░░ Copy And Paste Him onto all of ur brainly answers
░░░░░░░▄▄▐▌▄▄░░░ So, He Can Take
░░░░░░░▀███▀█░▄░░ Over brainly
░░░░░░▐▌▀▄▀▄▀▐▄░░
░░░░░░▐▀░░░░░░▐▌░░
░░░░░░█░░░░░░░░█░
Freedom Summer and the Selma March both called attention to African American's lack of voting rights. The correct answer is C.
I think the line 'Since he was old enough to know, big boy' is the best line in the excerpt that uses metonymy. This is because the phrase 'he was old enough' is just an expanded meaning of the phrase 'big boy' - which is what metonymy is all about.
The writer of a book, poem, story, etc. is called the...
Author.