I think this quote is explaining how girls are taught from the beginning, shame. When girls turn into women, they believe they must be quiet, they must be happy, and they must be perfect. I disagree with this quote for this generation. I believe that we have broken through those previous barriers and are now teaching women strength, courageousness, and the power to be ourselves. I do agree with the line, "they grow up to be women who have turned pretense into an art form.". From my experience, I believe that women cannot have the same emotions as men, because it may come across different. A powerful woman is seen as snarky or rude, whereas a powerful man is admired.
The answer is B , if you take that word out and replace it with the other words only Professional sounds correct .
Answer:
Wild Hands, Steed Running, Drums of Regiment, Thousand Corpse Die
Explanation:
In the poem, 'War is Kind', Stephen Crane has used imagery depicting ghastly war scenes. The 'wild hands toward the sky' illustrates either a sign of victory of fury for killing while 'affrighted steed ran on alone' is when the rider is attacking the enemy in the battlefield. 'Hoarse, booming drums of the regiment' is war trumpet and 'born to drill and die' is image when soldiers fight each other and die. The most appropriate imagery is 'a field where a thousand corpses lie' which shows the outcome of a war for which the poet uses irony 'war is kin', which is actually very devastating. In 'your father tumbled in the yellow trenches' is the war imagery when a soldier tries to escape the gunfire.
Because thesues is always out of control. hope this helps