Answer:
In the opening stage directions the slave sense Tituba has most likely refers to her <u>instincts as a person in a subordinate position</u>.
Explanation:
Tituba is the <em>"Negro slave"</em> of Reverend Parris in Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible". This play revolves around the case of the Salem Witch Trials that depicts the wrongful accusation of numerous people in the town of Salem charged with practicing witchery.
With the stage direction describing the moment Tituba enters the room where Rev. Parris was praying, we get a sense of how she feels inferior and scared of her master. The statement that <em>"[she is also] very frightened because her slave sense has warned her that, as always, trouble in this house eventually lands on her back." </em>This statement indicates that she has been frequently blamed for any trouble happening in the house. And it made her aware of what her position is, being black and a slave at that.
(The poem is "A Thousand Martyrs" by Aphra Behn)
Answer: They reveal that the speaker enters relationships for her own amusement.
Explanation: The word <em>alone</em> is crucial here. The author is telling us that she always took "the glory and the spoils" (the things you take after winning a war) for herself only, <em>laughing</em>, i.e., amusing herself while being unworried with the other person's suffering.
Answer:
Hyperbole
Explanation:
Hyperbole is an exaggeration that is meant to bring out a point or add humor to the speech. In the sentence above, the reader knows quite well that it is impossible for a person to shake off his arm. However, the exaggeration was clearly used to stress the fact that Fred shook his arm so vigorously.
The intensity was so much that the speaker wondered how Fred did not shake his arm off.
Answer:
Gary likes to eat chocolate; dark chocolate is not his favorite.
Civil war started in April 13, 1861
The main cause of the war was slavery
The president during Civil war was Abraham Lincoln