Answer:
"What he most dreaded, that I most desired. What he most loved, that I most hated. That which to him was a great evil, to be carefully shunned, was to me a great good,..."
Explanation:
This is my answer because for what his master dreaded but he desired was freedom. What his master loved and Douglass hated was having to work for this man.
Answer:
This sentence would have to be corrected to:
According to Dr. James Peterman, it is extremely important to drink enough water every single day.
Explanation:
The last name in this excerpt, (Peterman), needed to be capitalized, as it was a proper noun. A proper noun is the name given to something to make it more specific.
The second part of the sentence need not be in quotes. Use quotation marks with <em>direct quotes</em>, with <em>titles of certain works</em>, to <em>imply alternate meanings</em>, and to write words as words.
The word "water" should not be in parenthesis. Parentheses are used to enclose incidental or extra information, such as a passing comment, a minor example or addition, or a brief explanation. The writer may choose to put additional information within parentheses or to set off the text using dashes or commas.
An update of the setting of a play by Shakespeare to modern times could be found in an adaptation. Adaptations often take a book, film, stage play or television series and change it while maintaining its essence. For example, the 1999 movie <em>Ten Things I Hate About You</em> is an adaptation of <em>The Taming of the Shrew</em>, by William Shakespeare, set in a high school with teenagers as protagonists.
Answer:
Feminism is shown in the poem "The man from snowy river" when Jessica was unable to constantly stay in the house and learn to serve as a lady, She wants more than just tea parties or shoe shining like the typical women in the poem but she wants to work with the men.
Explanation:
Jessica believes she has the ability to work like a man can and that she is equal to them, for instance she wanted to work in the barn like the men, but her father disapproves of that and instead drags her out of the barn and told her to follow the conventional path like the women there.
Her father Harrison tells her that working in the barn is not an occupation for a lady and that she should think of marriage, but Jessica did not bow down to her father's will but instead argues with him on the ground of equality depicting feminism in the poem.