Answer:
A young girl when she first visited magical Underland, Alice Kingsleigh (Mia Wasikowska) is now a teenager with no memory of the place -- except in her dreams. Her life takes a turn for the unexpected when, at a garden party for her fiance and herself, she spots a certain white rabbit and tumbles down a hole after him. Reunited with her friends the Mad Hatter (Johnny Depp), the Cheshire Cat and others, Alice learns it is her destiny to end the Red Queen's (Helena Bonham Carter) reign of terror.
Answer:
"Outraged" and "satisfied" are the adjectives that can be used to describe the tone of the text.
Explanation:
The text presents a change of tone in the course of its narration that justifies the use of two adjectives to describe it. the words "outraged" and "satisfied", reflect well the tone created by the author and the change in tone that can be observed.
At the beginning of the text we can see that the author used an indignant tone to present his ideas. This is because he shows and criticizes the way in which the history of blacks was erased, his contributions to America were disregarded and how it served to dehumanize blacks and affirm concepts that devalue them and make them expendable to society.
However, the author presents a tone of satisfaction, when he shows that after struggles, the history of blacks is being rescued and built in a strong and efficient way. In addition, he presents how blacks are managing not only to show, but to prove their importance, even in the midst of so much prejudice that still exists.
Answer:
The earliest Shakespeare play in which ghosts appear is Richard III. Asleep in his tent before the Battle of Bosworth, Richard is visited by the spirits of his victims, one after another. Each one in turn recalls his or her fate at Richard’s hand, predicts their killer’s defeat in the forthcoming battle, and ends by telling him to ‘Despair and die’ (5.3.126). Each one of them also speaks to the sleeping Earl of Richmond, leader of the army opposing Richard, and tells him to ‘Live and flourish’ (5.3.131). Richard sleeps through all this, and any theatre audience can take it that the ghosts are in his troubled dreams. He wakes to say, ‘I did but dream. / O coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me!’ (5.3.178–79)Yet we cannot simply turn these ghosts into figments of the tyrant’s tormented psyche. In Richmond’s camp we find the opposing leader talking of having had the ‘fairest-boding dreams / That ever ent’red in a drowsy head’ (5.3.227–28). He tells his attendant lords that ‘souls whose bodies Richard murther’d / Came to my tent and cried on victory’ (5.3.230–31), seemingly confirming the events of the night. And the ghosts have certainly appeared on the stage and spoken. The actors probably – on the day-lit stage of the Globe – had their skin whitened with flour. In Shakespeare’s source story in Holinshed’s Chronicles, Richard is said to have had a terrible dream of ‘images like terrible devils’ on the night before the battle, but there is no mention of ghosts. This parade of the dead come back to life is entirely Shakespeare’s creation.
Explanation:
idrk if this would help anyone anymore, hope this helps ;-;
The correct answer is A. he thinks it is just bad luck.
When Mersault kills the Arab, nobody really takes the accident seriously - Mersault says it is because the Sun was hot, some say he had it coming, whereas Celeste thinks the Arab was just in the wrong place at the wrong time which is why he got killed.
yeah sorry but I don't know what's going on here :(