<span> Curie, a two-time Nobel Prize recipient and physics professor at the Sorbonne (a college of the University of Paris), presented this speech at Vassar College in Housekeeping, New York, on May 14, 1921. The speech, preserved in print as no. 2 of Vassar's Ellen S. Richards Monographs series, centers on what Curie called "the somewhat peculiar conditions of the discovery of radium" and her view that "the scientific history of radium is beautiful." The speech is provided online at the Gifts of Speech Web site, by Liz Linton, site director; and electronic resources and serials librarian in Cochran Library, Sweet Briar College, Virginia.</span>
Answer:
Even with my close family people tend to judge me the clothes i wear and i am not fair so people tend to call me black or stupid names but once i walked past a man whom i had not known he looked at me called me names bad ones i was disheartened i had suicidal thought and cried but now i don't care i am happy and complete.
Answer:
Connotation
Explanation:
When we talk about the meaning of a word, we can talk about its two aspects: denotation and connotation. Denotative meaning is the literal, basic meaning of the word. You will always encounter it in dictionaries when looking for what the word means. Though, there is another kind of meaning, the one we refer to as the connotative meaning. It includes emotions and associations connected to a certain word and is usually not a part of dictionary definitions.
Connotation can be positive, neutral, and negative. <em>Economical</em> and <em>stingy </em>have similar meanings: <em>careful not to waste money or resources</em>. The difference in connotation is present, as being economical is a positive trait, while stinginess is not, as a stingy person usually isn't simply careful about not unnecessarily spending but is very ungenerous and mean as well.
The excerpt above <span>helps the authors arrive at their conclusion by :
</span><span>providing statistical evidence.</span>