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marishachu [46]
3 years ago
12

Select the correct answer.

English
2 answers:
natita [175]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

D 100%

Explanation:

read the story it is a tough decision between people working at the mall's construction site AND people living close to the mall's construction site BUT i know it is D...

dexar [7]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

You have to type it up again

Explanation:

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Evaluate the physical, social and economic consequences of this crime to the offender. How did this corruption and fraud impact
timofeeve [1]

When you commit a crime that not only impacts you and the place you work for, it can have serious consequences both here and abroad.  It means that this institution and this country are willing to commit crimes just to increase its wealth.  It means that they cannot be trusted and no institution or country will not do business with them because of that.

3 0
4 years ago
Which sentence is an example of a biased statement?
Elis [28]
Provide the sentences.
3 0
4 years ago
Help with this hard task please brainly guys
Fantom [35]

Answer:

they people are at the movies they are watching the movie they feel surprise because the are making facial expressions he is an old man in the blue shirt he feel surprise which I think they are watching a scary movie

Explanation:

☆┌─┐ ─┐☆

│▒│ /▒/

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3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
who’s good at writtinf character analysis??????? If so can u reply here I need help writing 2 paragraphs ab a novel “no sugar” H
hammer [34]

Answer:

Explanation:No Sugar is a postcolonial play written by Indigenous Australian playwright Jack Davis, set during the Great Depression, in Northam, Western Australia, Moore River Native Settlement and Perth. The play focuses on the Millimurras, an Australian Aboriginal family, and their attempts at subsistence.

The play explores the marginalisation of Aboriginal Australians in the 1920s and 1930s in Australia under the jurisdiction of a white government. The pivotal themes in the play include racism, white empowerment and superiority, Aboriginal disempowerment, the materialistic values held by the white Australians, Aboriginal dependency on their colonisers, and the value of family held by Aboriginal people.

The play was first performed by the Playhouse Company in association with the Australian Theatre Trust, for the Festival of Perth on 18 February 1985. It also was chosen as a contribution to Expo 86 in Canada[1][2] No Sugar forms the first part of a trilogy, the First Born Trilogy, which also includes the titles The Dreamers and Barungin (Smell the Wind). The trilogy was first performed by the Melbourne Theatre Company in May 1988 at the Fitzroy Town Hall.[3] The play won the 1987 Western Australian Premiers Award[4] and in 1992 the Kate Challis RAKA Award for Indigenous Playwrights.[5]

The play utilises the perambulant model, which is a technique used in drama to dislocate the audience involving multiple points of focus. Throughout No Sugar it is employed to convey a sense of displacement to the audience, representative of the isolation felt by the Aboriginal people unable and unwilling to assimilate to white culture.

Characters

Jimmy Munday, the protagonist.

Gran Munday, Jimmy's mother, a traditional Aboriginal woman.

Milly Millimurra, Jimmy's sister, who has three children.

Sam Millimurra, Milly's husband. .

Joe Millimurra, Mary's love interest and Milly's eldest son.

Cissie Millimurra, Milly's daughter.

David Millimurra - Milly's youngest son.

A. O. Neville, Chief Protector of Aborigines.

Miss Dunn, his secretary.

Mr Neal, Superintendent of Moore River Native Settlement. Abuses Indigenous people and is lecherous to Indigenous girls.

Matron Neal, his wife, Matron of the hospital.

Sister Eileen, a Catholic missionary.

Sergeant Carrol, sergeant of the Northam Police.

Constable Kerr, member of the Northam Police.

Frank Brown, an unemployed farmer who befriends Jimmy Munday.

Mary Dargurru, Joe's love interest. An outspoken girl who is mistreated by Neal, works for the Matron at the settlement.

Billy Kimberley, a Black tracker, an Aborigine working for Mr Neal.

Bluey, a Black tracker.

Topsy, Mary's subservient and submissive friend who also works for the Matron.

Justice of the Peace, a farmer who sentences Frank Brown, Jimmy and Sam for alcohol abuse.

5 0
3 years ago
The stars reflected diamonds on the ocean's rippling surface
Afina-wow [57]

The answer is C: It compares the stars' reflections to diamonds to suggest the idea of beauty in nature.

The metaphor used here, in poetic terms, is stating that, as the stars reflect on the surface of the ocean, one can marvel at the beauty of such an occurrence in nature, and since the image shows not the influence of man on the occurrence, it is then perfectly comprehensible to interpret the metaphor as one referring to the beauty in nature.  


7 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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