Since <em>distant:intimate </em>are words that have opposite meanings, you need to find another pair of words with the same quality.
The correct answer is morose:joyous, because those two words mean different things.
Answer: D. While controlling immigration continues to be a concern of the government, policies have mostly shifted from being exclusionary to inclusionary over time.
Explanation:
The article, ''<em>America's Shifting Views on Immigration'' </em>by <em>Mark Kubic</em> had the main idea that the US government has been very concerned with controlling immigration for almost as long as it has been in existence.
The policies enacted however, have varied between exclusionary such as laws that prohibited Catholics, Jews and Asians to policies that were inclusionary such as those that welcomed refugees from eastern Europe when it was dominated by communists.
Answer:
It helped him become successful.
Explanation:
The answer is D: allusion
The poetic technique illustrated throughout the entire poem "Happiness Epidemic" is <em>allusion</em> , which is the figure of speech the authors use to make a brief reference to a place, person, idea or event in order to make association from these sources. It is a reference to something or someone outside the text. <em>The author mentions health/medical issues: Epidemic, disease, syntoms, clinically, major organs, virus etc to describe happiness and its effects.</em>
These words were said to Creon when Oedipus accused him of treason, because Creon had information that pointed out Oedipus as the murderer of his own father.
This happened because Oedipus sent Creon to the oracle of Apollo, to obtain revelations about who was the assassin of King Laios, whom Oedipus did not know was his biological father. Creon arrived with the information that Laios' killer was among them, among the royal family. Oedipus powerfully seeks the killer, but all the clues point to him. Unhappy, Edipo claims that Creonte is lying, that he is a traitor who wishes to usurp the throne and that he deserves death for that.