<span>I Think
1."Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass" is about </span>1. "Freedom of the individual", 2. "I Have a Dream" is about <span>4. Segregation and Equal Rights", </span>3. "A 400-Year-Old Woman" is about 3. "Immigration and Integration", and 4. "The Gettysburg Address" is about <span>2. "Freedom of a United Nation"
1 - 1
2 - 4
3 - 3
4 - 2
But i am not 100% Sure! =(
My apologizes if Incorrect! =)
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Answer:
- Figurative language: A figure of speech
- Setting: an act of fixing or solving any errors or problems
- Characterization: featured description of any speech
- Simile : figure of speech comparing two unlike things
- Metaphor: any representative or symbolic figure of speech ( i.e headline )
- Imagery : visually descriptive or figurative language that shows emotions and feelings
- Personification: the language of describing non-living things upon living beings
- Tone : level of attitude to express about particular matter
- Conflict : clash / disagreement
- Superman v/s Lex luthor
- Man v/s insecurity of being mocked
- Man v/s low class girl
- Any government cheif v/s corruption
Explanation:
well if you have any problems or issues to understand the answer... feel free to ask me anytime :)
The correct answer should me Mark Anthony assists a leader .
<span>a. direct object</span>
Direct objects are words or set of words or phrases that are directly or is in contact immediate to its describer, either a noun pronoun adjective or adverb.
<span>For example, </span>
<span>1.A. Direct Object </span>
Sally brought Cindy yellow -daisies- to cheer her up.
The answer is the first option: <em><u>"On my summer trip, I plan to visit Chicago and Los Angeles."</u></em>
The Associated Press Style guide states some rules for documents to have a common understanding. Some of the rules state that we must spell out numbers from one to nine and for the rest, they should use figures (Which is what happens in the second option). Another rule lists some cities that don't need the state name such as Pennsylvania, Boston San Francisco, and Los Angeles. (Which is what happens in the third and fourth options). And as we can see in the last option, the commas rule after "and/or" is missing.
The AP style guide also states rules about quotation, punctuation, numbers, names, cities, dates, days, capitalizations, and others.