Answer:
Explanation:
But one hundred years later, the Negro still is not free. One century later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the
chains of exclusion and the chains of unfairness. One century later, the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty amid a vast ocean of material prosperity. One hundred years later, the Negro is still languished in the corners of American society and finds himself an exile in his land.
And so we've come here today to dramatize a shameful condition
Answer:
He lives spontaneously, unlike the narrator.
Explanation:
The camper is a symbol of freedom that the narrator does not have. He is not encumbered by responsibilities.
Answer:
B: Poetry communicates something authentic or real.
The correct answers are A. A magazine article exaggerating the public’s extreme reaction to a celebrity, B. A funny political cartoon exposing the flaws in a new government policy, and D. An ironic short story that draws attention to how unmotivated people can be
Explanation:
The purpose of satire is to criticize negative aspects of individuals, society or government, for this, satire does not use literal language but relies on irony, humor or exaggeration that show indirectly the absurdity of some behaviors and actions. This also implies texts that use literal language and do not focus on criticizing society are not satirical.
According to this, from the options provided the texts that are example of satire are "A magazine article exaggerating the public’s extreme reaction to a celebrity" because this uses exaggeration to show a negative aspect of people and create a critique; "A funny political cartoon exposing the flaws in a new government policy" because this exposes the flaws of government through humor; and "An ironic short story that draws attention to how unmotivated people can be" because as other examples this focuses on showing flaws or vices by using humor.
Answer: Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr, and Harriet Tubman.
Explanation:
I would love if Rosa Parks, and Martin Luther King Jr were there. So, I could thank them for all they have done, for the people of colors, freedom today. I would love if Harriet Tubman was there, and I'd thank her for helping many slaves be set free, and for all she has done.
I would ask Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr, how did they manage civil rights movement so well, and so fearlessly? I would ask Harriet Tubman was the Underground Railroad a true place?
(Since it's Black History month, that is why I decided these people.)