Answer:
Amiri Baraka (born Everett LeRoi Jones) was African-American writer whose main themes range from black liberation to white racism. In his poem “Ka’ba” he states that only “sacred word” adequate to activate spells and magic can save black people: “Correspondence with ourselves/ and our Black family. We need magic/now we need the spells, to raise up/return, destroy,and create. What will be/the sacred word?”
Explanation:
comment how it helps
Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
Explain why Bud says that "It's funny how ideas are, in a lot of ways they're just like seeds. Both of them start real small and then ... Woop, zoop, sloop ... Before you can say Jack Robinson they've gone and grown a lot bigger than you ever thought they could"
Answer:
Bud says this to show how a small and insignificant idea became something big inside him, becoming his biggest goal.
Explanation:
Bud explains that the idea of looking for and finding his father was insignificant, small in his subconscious and that he could go unnoticed by other more important and impacting ideas, however, over time, that idea grew and grew until he became the biggest goal of his life. To better explain it to the reader, he makes reference to how a seed so small can become such a large and imposing tree. The seed symbolizes the idea and the tree symbolizes the goal.
It suggests
that artificial technologies will develop the ability to reason. After a period
of Internet growth, programmers will refine the Internet by adding
intelligence. by presenting a metaphor of a dirt road being paved, and it is Internet
search engine.
Answer:
I think it would be sender