<span>"Why do you think Willie Mays was such a good baseball player?" is open-ended.</span>
Answer:
Airplane crash.
Explanation:
Billy knows the airplane will crash, but he says nothing. The passengers are entertained by a barbershop quartet. The group sings lewd, racist songs to entertain Billy's father-in-law. When the plane crashes into Sugarbush Mountain, Vermont, everyone is killed except Billy and the copilot.
The technological advances addressed in the novel, "1984," that present ethical implications today is the propaganda being emitted from the radios in the streets which can be the same to media outlets in the Western World today that seems to be one-sided on certain arguments. A lot of people’s opinions are based on what is presented on television media, therefore their opinions become one-sided.
The source of the speaker's creative powers comes from the beauty of the world that the poet had witnessed.
<u>Explanation:</u>
"Full Powers" is a Latin poem written by Pablo Neruda which was translated by Ben Belitt and Alastair Reid.
Pablo Neruda titled the poem "Full Powers" to demonstrate the civic life and the power of the politicians and the need of objectifying their domination. The source of the speaker's creative powers comes from the beauty of the world that the poet had witnessed.
He is put in confusion of what life really is and the existence of linguistic habits and the facade kindness of the politicians. He tries to break the political struggle through the poem, "Full Powers".
This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
The bow of God's wrath is bent . . . it is nothing but the mere pleasure of God, and that of an angry God, without any promise or obligation at all, that keeps the arrow one moment from being made drunk with your blood.
In this excerpt, the word “wrath” suggests that:
God wants to destroy the reader.
God is eager to wage war.
God is fiercely angry.
God is feeling extreme grief.
Answer: God is fiercely angry.
Explanation:
This excerpt from Jonathan Edwards´' Sinners in the hands of an angry god', uses the metaphor of the string of a bow being bent, meaning that an arrow is ready to be released, as a comparison with God being on the verge of killing men because of how angry he is with humanity´s sins or loss of faith in Christianity.