I think this does: <span>The novel's action begins at the start of summer, when life is in its fullest bloom, and ends at the start of autumn.</span>
The statements that best describe both excerpts are: Okita uses the tomato, a food native to the Americas, to highlight the speaker's American identity, while Cisneros uses the English language to give her characters an American identity.
In these two excerpts, we find that the native tomatoes established the American identity.
This is found in the fact that the speaker's father said that the soil in the new place they were going to will not support the growth of the love apples.
In the second excerpt, the speaker explicitly mentions that he speaks English. This identifies him.
So, option A shows how the two excerpts reveal the identities of the characters.
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In areas like political or social debates, a disputant is the person who takes part in a dispute. In words put simply, a disputant is a debater. He/she states her arguments on significant world problems or issues based on his/her experience, research and moral principles. When there is a conflict resolution, it means that there is an agreement reached by the two disputants or debaters.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born on February 27, 1807 and died on March 24, 1882. He was an American poet and educator whose works include "Paul Revere's Ride", The Song of Hiawatha, and Evangeline. He was also the first American to translate Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy and was one of the four Fireside Poets from New England.
“The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow describes a coastal scene. The tide rises, and the tide falls. Its twilight, a bird is calling, and a traveller is leaving the shore, heading for a near town. Now it's dark, the sea is shouting, and the waves erase the traveller's footprints from the shore. Despite this disconsolate perspective, the dawn does come again. There are signs of life everywhere. Horses are ready and raising to go; a hostler is calling out. Sure, the traveller will never return to the shore because he's dead, but the tide rises again, and then… well, the tide falls.
The statement that best describes the purpose of the word “nevermore” is:
C) The word helps create a more dramatic, resolute tone.