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mihalych1998 [28]
3 years ago
5

How are semicolons effective

English
1 answer:
natka813 [3]3 years ago
6 0
They seperate stuff that is how
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The swimming contest ends with the word losers what do you think the author means for readers to understand by this what was los
nadya68 [22]

Benjamin Tammuz is a popular author from Israel, with his a considerable lot of his books and papers, for example, "The Orchard, The brief tale The Swimming Contest is distributed in the arrangement.

The Swimming Contest" ends with the word "losers". What was "lost"

Data as well as an individual's life is lost toward the finish of the brief tale. The Swimming Contest closes with the creator pondering the way that he and every one of those present around him have lost important information because of the demise of Abdul Karim.

The creator utilizes the term of the story to show the continuous clash between those of Arab and Hebrew plunge.

Accordingly, losers further infers that there are no genuine champs in the occasions happening all through the brief tale as well as during any contention.

For more information, refer the following link:

brainly.com/question/3620370

4 0
2 years ago
What are some facts about the NAACP
nikklg [1K]
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is a civil rights organization in the United States, formed in 1909 as a bi-racial organization to advance justice for African Americans by W. E. B. <span>
Founded: </span>February 12, 1909<span>
CEO: </span><span>Cornell William Brooks (May 17, 2014–)</span><span>
Headquarters: </span>Baltimore, MD<span>
Budget: </span>27.62 million USD<span>
Founders: </span><span>W. E. B. Du Bois, Ida B. Wells, Mary White Ovington, More</span><span>
Leaders: </span><span>Roslyn Brock, <span>Cornell William Brooks

</span></span>Founded in 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP<span>) was one of the earliest and most influential civil rights organization in the United States. During its early years, the </span>NAACP<span> focused on legal strategies designed to confront the critical civil rights issues of the day.
</span>

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) was founded in 1909-1910 in New York City by a group of white and black intellectuals. United in their opposition to the gradualism preached by Booker T. Washington, the NAACP leaders sought, first, to make whites aware of the need for racial equality. To do this, the organization launched a program of speechmaking, lobbying, and publicizing the issue. It also started a magazine, the Crisis, which was edited for years by the black leader W. E. B. Du Bois. At the same time, the NAACP attacked segregation and racial inequality through the courts. It won a Supreme Court decision in 1915 against the grandfather clause (used by many southern states to prevent blacks from voting) and another in 1927 against the all-white primary.

<span>Did You Know?Founded in 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) today has approximately 425,000 members.</span>
4 0
3 years ago
Which phrase is a prepositional phrase?
Shtirlitz [24]

C. At the end of the road

This is a prepositional phrase because it describes the location/position of something! Prepositions can also explain time...

Here are some more examples of prepositional phrases!

  • I need to eat <u>BEFORE I GO TO SCHOOL </u>
  • The dog is sleeping <u>UNDER THE TABLE</u>
  • I saw someone walking <u>ALONGSIDE THE ROAD</u>
  • <u>AFTER I WAKE UP</u>, I brush my teeth
5 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What types of details does Eliot use to recreate the market scene in Romola? Which details are specific to the novel’s time and
vichka [17]

George Eliot's (nee Mary Ann Evans) novel Romola features a complicated love triangle involving the titular character, the blind scholar Bardo de’ Bardi’s daughter, the shipwrecked scholar, Tito, and the local barber’s daughter, Tessa. It's set against the backdrop of a rapidly transforming Florence (immediately following the death of the town’s long-time leader, Lorenzo de’ Medici, and the looming war against France), and provides perhaps one of literature’s longest drawn-out sentences describing the central market and its role in the town’s day-to-day life.  For purposes of brevity, it is not reproduced in whole here.  Suffice it to say, the following passage from the opening chapter of Romola, titled “Proem,” provides Eliot’s first and most descriptive passage regarding the market:

“They had now emerged from the narrow streets into a broad piazza, known to the older Florentine writers as the Mercato Vecchio, or the Old Market.  This piazza, though it had been the scene of a provision-market from time immemorial, and may, perhaps, says fond imagination, be the very spot to which the Fesulean ancestors of the Florentines descended from their high fastness to traffic with the rustic population of the valley, had not been shunned as a place of residence by Florentine wealth.  In the early decades of the fifteenth century, which was now near its end, the Medici and other powerful families of the popolani grassi, or commercial nobility, had their houses there, not perhaps finding their ears much offended by the loud roar of mingled dialects, or their eyes much shocked by the butchers’ stalls . . . The proud corporation, or Art, of butchers was in abeyance, and it was the great-harvest time of the market-gardeners, the cheese-mongers, the vendors of macaroni, corn, eggs, milk, and dried fruits . . .”

In that passage, Eliot provides the reader nuggets of historical and cultural background that reflect her long-time interest in Italy and, particularly, Florentine culture.  Eliot’s interest in Italy has been well-documented (see, for example, Andrew Thompson’s George Eliot and Italy; Thompson notes the influences on Eliot’s literature stemming from this interest in Italian history and culture and the details she accumulated during her six visits there), and her personal observations are felt throughout her novel.  The Old Market, Eliot points out, served as the focal point of Florentine life, and was one place where the upper classes could be counted on to be found mingling among the lower classes, including the merchants whose stands and stores characterized this socially-important venue.  The market had, Eliot points out, evolved over time, with its streets becoming increasingly peopled by the less-affluent and less-cultured among Florentine society.  The market, though, retained its position as the main confluence of Florentine society, with the more rugged elements sharing space with the more refined hold-outs from an earlier period.  As she wrote later in that opening chapter:

“Ladies and gentlemen, who came to market, looked on at a larger amount of amateur fighting than could easily be seen in later times, and behold more revolting rags, beggary, and rascaldom, than modern householders could well picture to themselves. . . But, still, there was the relief of prettier sights: there were brood-rabbits, not less innocent and astonished than those of own period; there were doves and singing-birds to bought as presents for the children; there were even kittens for sale . . . And high on a pillar in the center of the place – a venerable pillar, fetched from the church of San Giovanni – stood Donatello’s stone statue of Plenty, with a fountain near it where, says old Pucci, the good wives of the market freshened their utensils, and their throats also; not because they were unable to buy wine, but because they wished to save money for their husbands.”

Eliot’s descriptions of the Old Market reflect her study of Italian history and her observations of Florentine culture.  She was able to capture the essence of a central square in a bustling, vibrant city as it had inevitably aged over the years.  Romola would have suffered greatly if not for the author’s first-hand observations of the novel’s settings.  Her descriptions, while occurring within the context of her less-than-fluent prose (at least as observed by one reader who can write run-on sentences with the best of them) make her novel a valuable source of insight into the Italy of an earlier time.

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Which literary form is most likely to use a superhuman character as a hero or a protagonist?
yarga [219]
The only possible answer for this question is biography.
3 0
3 years ago
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