Answer:
But here and there a few cars groaning creep
Along, above, and underneath the street
Explanation:
The poem <em>Dawn in New York</em> by Claude Mckay is a short poem with just 14 lines. This narrative poem talks about sunrise in New York city one morning, with the use of descriptive words to paint a picture of the event for the readers.
The lines that suggest that the morning commute is starting to begin can be from the 7th and 8th lines of the poem.<em> "But here and there a few cars groaning creep Along, above, and underneath the street"</em>, showing the first sign of movement of the people.
Answer: It would be ocean's
Explanation: In this context the apostrophe show ownership, or WHOSE waters became choppy (I know an ocean is a WHAT and not a WHO but phrasing it like this in my mind always helped me). Without the apostrophe it would be the plural form of OCEAN.
Answer:
The first one supports the analogy because most blankets are just a giant piece of fabric, while quilts are made up of many small pieces, each one representing something.
The second one supports the analogy because quilts are made up of a bunch of different patchworks to make one giant blanket, and America is made up from a bunch of different people who come from different cultural backgrounds to make one giant nation.
basically, quilts = lots of pieces, america = lots of different people