The correct answer is letter B. <span>It blends elements of narration and nonfiction by describing true people and events using plot, characterization, and other techniques common in fiction. </span>The correct definition of narrative nonfiction is that It blends elements of narration and nonfiction by describing true people and events using plot, characterization, and other techniques common in fiction.
This is a very opinionated question, so I don't know how much I can help, but as the babysitter of four kids around this age- I would suggest telling Timothy that he can take a nap if he wants, but he still has to go to bed early- (8 or 9 or whatever.) he doesn't neccesarily have to sleep, but he does have to stay in bed quietly and not disturb his mother. (my family does the same thing, they're allowed to read or talk to each other quietly if they're the 2 that share a room.) Likewise if he doesn't take a nap and becomes grouchy, he could be "punished" by going to bed earlier, which may end up helping. Timothy might be agreeable to not taking a nap because you could frame it like him being a "big kid."
You could also just make it so his naps are shorter, and wake him up on your own instead of letting him sleep for a full 2-3 hours.
Answer:
noun ,pronoun , preposition
Explanation:
Noun. Thing or person. Pencil, cat, work, notebook. This is my cat. They live in Madrid.
Pronoun Replaces a noun I, you, he, she, it He is very clever.
Preposition Links a noun to another word At, in, of, on, after, under She was hiding under the table.
Hurston argues that the American society has misapprehended black people, even to the present day. And it's not because it is hard to understand and accept black people, but because the white majority is entirely indifferent to them. They don't care about black people's preoccupations, struggles, internal problems. And it isn't only white Americans who employ such an attitude. It is also colored immigrants and people of other ethnicities who join in.
Hence the misconceptions about black people. They are still being perceived in the context of their former slavery. They are almost never seen as heterogeneous population, where there are educated and uneducated, skilled and unskilled. Thereby the white majority reinforces the ancient narrative that blacks don't even deserve education, as it won't improve their inherently corrupt nature
The media don't help either. Their portrayal of black people is uniform. Of course, their work is commercial, and they won't make stories that don't sell. But that only means that the general audience is not interested in ordinary, everyday, human stories about black people. It is not only a snobbish perspective; it is a socially detrimental perspective which excludes a huge population which is a part of America.