Answer:
Act and scene. Dialogue only shows what the people are saying to each other or thinking to themselves.
Explanation:
Answer:
Elie Wiesel, Nobel Laureate, a Jewish, World War II holocaust survivor, who lost his family as a child in the holocaust and had fought tirelessly against injustice, in his Nobel peace prize acceptance speech on 1986 swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation.
Explanation:
I took the Test
Answer: It reinforces the idea that the rights given to others are not extended to African Americans.
Explanation:
In the speech he gave on July 5, 1852 -<em>"What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?", </em>Frederick Douglass argues that African Americans are denied the rights they were promised by the Declaration of Independence. In doing so, he asks a series of rhetorical questions. When he describes the injustice brought by slavery, he asks if that is "a question for Republicans." The idea that Douglass wants to convey is that the rights that all the people should have are applied only to white Americans.
Answer:
Dear (Insert what ever name you want),
Did you know that Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata means Mondscheinsonate in German? I found this out just a few (insert your time you want here. Ex. days, minutes, seconds, years, etc.) This name Moonlight Sonata was not given until the 1830's by Ludwig Rellstab, though the song was made in the 1800's. Ludwig Rellstab decided to name it Moonlight Sonata because it reminded him of the moon setting over Lake Lucerne. An even more interesting theories is that Beethoven proposed to Giulietta, and that she was inclined to marry him. Many say this song is romantic, over sad.
Sincerely,
(Insert your name here)
Explanation:
D because it has the text there and there is context clues