This is really simple! I recommend doing a drawing, even if you don't have any artistic talent. You can choose any topic, but here's some suggestions: your favorite animal, your favorite location, something you like to do, etc. Draw your topic and/or anything related to it. For the last question something like "I enjoyed having freedom on this assignment because it made it much more fun" would be good!
This is a few ways of getting a paragraph but it's very useful in informal letter writing or when you are writing to your friend or someone you know. To be sarcastic means to say something but yoi actually mean the opposite. Now leys write a paragraph.
Hi Kelvin. It's your best friend Nana Yaw, you wish. I just wanted to tell you about my new girlfriend i made and i'm sure you'll be mad to see me with her so good luck.
I was sarcastic when i said i was his best friend. This is how i can explain and i hope this helps.
Looking for Alaska is the figurative language because you can't actually look for Alaska
Since Richard Rodriguez is a writer that emphasized his origins as the son of Mexican immigrants, but nevertheless was raised by the American academia and society. In the essay of Hunger of Memory, he stated how after being part of a socially disadvantaged family, that although it was very close, the extreme public alienation, made him feel in disadvantage to other children as he grew up. Due to this, 30 years later he pays essential attention to how from being a socially aligned to a Mexican immigrant child, he grew up to be an average American man. He analyses his persona from that social point of view of being different in the race but similar in the customs. Hence, the author finds himself struggling with his identity.
A good example of it, it’s the manner he introduces his last name. A Spanish rooted last name, which may seem difficult to pronounce to a native English speaker. The moment the author introduces himself and tries to clarify its pronunciation to an American person, he mentions how his parents are no longer his parents in a cultural sense.
His parents belong to a different culture, his parents grew up in a different context, they were raised with different values and ways; in that sense, Rodriguez culturally sees himself as an American, his education was different to his parents’. He doesn’t see his parents as his culture-educators, he adamantly rejects the idea that he might be able to claim "unbroken ties" to his inherited culture to the ones of White Americans who would anoint him to play out for them some drama of ancestral reconciliation. As the author said, “Perhaps because I am marked by the indelible color they easily suppose that I am unchanged by social mobility, that I can claim unbroken ties with my past.”
<u>Similar responses:</u>
- In both the poems the beloved is seen responding to her lover and his love.
- In the first poem, the beloved has no issue with the lover forgetting her and the waves washing her name away. It is the lover who insists on eternalizing their love.
- The nymph too is not moved by all the material gifts given to her by her lover and speaks the truth when she says that if youth was to stay for long she wouldn’t mind being her beloved. Her approach to love is very straightforward and like the beloved in Spenser’s sonnet she is very candid to her lover baring her mind to him.