Answer:
This allusion supports the search for freedom and the difficult world of runaway slaves.
Explanation:
Oh Susanna is a popular song part of the minstrel tradition in which African Americans were made fun of and depicted as simple and ignorant. The original song has a verse in which the protagonist talks about killing black men along the way during the Gold Rush. This verse and other racist remarks of the original text have been taken out over the years. The use of this allusion in the poem Runagate Runagate by Hayden, expresses the urge to find freedom, even if it meant struggles, hardship or even death. It is, at the end, an allusion that reminds the reader of the will and the defiance needed to run away.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
A - inform readers about how scholars built on each other’s knowledge to decipher the Rosetta Stone and learn about Egyptian history. 
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
In the poem it talks about us as people not having the choices we think we should or believe we should have. My theme statement is that maybe sometimes what we expect we should have isnt always going to be for us .The poem talks about choices and on top of that going into further research, Giovanni created this poem right after her father died. The poem basically is saying that we don't have the choices we think we should have or believe but we know that life is short.
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
1) Willow is taken to the hospital where she passes out and hits her head, After getting stitches, she runs away from there and goes to the Library and hid behind a large chair
2) Mai bullies Dell Duke at the burger and pie diner as she ordered alot of food and then made Dell to pay for it.
3) Dell Duke gave Willow a test like the one she was accused of cheating in and she aced it. If Dell had handed over the test scores, principal would have realized that Willow didn't cheat in the exam after all, and Dell Duke's incompetence would have been discovered.
 
        
             
        
        
        
The answer is <u>WRECK</u>.
As a noun, 'decay' is the state of gradual damage or decline in strength, soundness, or prosperity, that is to say, of becoming worse. Similar to the noun 'wreck' that is the state of being damaged, disabled, in ruin or dilapidation.
The other words do not support the meaning of 'decay', because 'colossal' refers to something extremely big, 'bare' is something/someone without any clothes or not covered by anything, and 'round' is something shaped like a ball or circle, or curved.