You didn’t add the sayings
Answer:
No
Explanation:
It actually is
Yesterday, we didn't watch birds.
Answer:
The detail that presents evidence of this purpose is:
The noise and clamour with which this is attended, and the eagerness visible in the countenances of the buyers, serve not a little to increase the apprehensions of the terrified Africans.
Explanation:
The author's purpose is to "excite... a sense of compassion." In other words, <u>he wants readers to feel sympathy for those who suffered as a consequence of slavery. One way to instigate compassion and sympathy in others is to unveil to them how painful an experience was. </u>By describing how one suffered, the way one felt while going through something, it is possible to have people empathize. Among the options, the one that refers to the way Africans felt while being traded is the last one:
<em>The noise and clamour with which this is attended, and the eagerness visible in the countenances of the buyers, serve not a little to increase the apprehensions of the terrified Africans.</em>
<u>We can imagine, even feel, their fear. The eagerness of those who were buying them, treating them not as human beings but as goods, only contributed to their terror. By reading this, we can't help but feel compassion for them.</u>
Answer: A
Explanation: it's not B, because that just doesn't mean thoughtful at all.
It's not C because religious people don't say "o god" because that's using the lord's name on vain. And they do not do that. Not D because it has absolutely nothing to do with philosophy so it has to be A and it does show they're emotional because of the exclamation! : ) hope that helped.
Correct answer: the narrator is able to justify his failures with theirs.
Explanation:
All throughout the text, the narrator is trying to justify his/her choice to give up studying natural history. The author felt like if the great minds of the time could be so easily overthrown and had been ignorant on so many topics until then, then it was worthless to pursue the study of such subjects. The narrator feels like their belittlement makes up for the choice not to pursue those studies in natural history.