Answer: A welcome sight to ravenou cowboys would be food. This is because they work pretty much all day.
Answer:
Very sad
Explanation:
usually when somebody's parents get divorced they get very sad and it will be a very bad struggle because it might be hard to think about who she wants to live with or etc, but all I really know is that she'll probably be really sad
Answer:
option d: can be accomplished by clicking one's tongue
Explanation:
Echolocation can be defined as a human unique capabilities or ability to notice (detection) objects in their environment through echoes sensing from those objects, by normally giving or creating sounds. Example is using your mouth to make clicking sound, tapping your foot.
The opening of King's speech uses metaphors to compare the promises of freedom made in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Emancipation Proclamation and the failure of these documents to procure those freedoms for all. He then turns to a metaphor familiar to all--the weather.
Quote: "This sweltering summer of the Negro's legitimate discontent will not pass until there is an invigorating autumn of freedom and equality."
Metaphor: King compares the legitimate anger of African-Americans to sweltering summer heat and freedom and equality to invigorating autumn.
Analysis: Anyone who's visited Washington D.C. in August has a keen understanding of what a "sweltering summer" produces--frustration, suffering, restlessness and a longing for relief. The hundreds of thousands in attendance would have clearly understood the implications of the need for relief from a sweltering summer day and the need for legislation that would procure rights for minorities; relief that began to arrive with the Civil Rights Act of 1964.