It might be saying that not everything fun has to be dangerous.
Answer:
The thought that is implied by the poem's first four lines is: the speaker wishes to live a carefree life.
Explanation:
Let's first take a look at the lines we are analyzing here:
<em>To fling my arms wide</em>
<em>In some place of the sun</em>
<em>To whirl and to dance</em>
<em>Till the white day is done.</em>
There is no way to know if the speaker is male or female, young or old. It could be Hughes himself, but it could also be a child. The description is quite childlike: "to fling my arms wide" is something children are more likely to do. But, imagine an adult, oppressed, hardened by prejudice and struggle, who finally achieves his dreams. To finally be free of worried, of fear, and of injustice. Wouldn't that adult feel like a child again? Carefree and happy?
That is what the four lines above seem to emphasize. The speaker wants a carefree life. He or she wants to play, to dance, to laugh his days away.

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<em />
<em>We have the word </em><em>drizzling</em><em>...</em>
<em />
Remember that a suffix is a morpheme added to the end of a word to form a derivative.
<em />
<em>Here's an example...</em>
<em>-ation, -fy, -ing, -itis.</em>
<em>Therefore, the word </em><em>drizzling</em><em> is a suffix. (It has </em><em>ing</em><em> in it.)</em>
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<em>Hope it helps!</em>
Answer:
A
Explanation:
The nurse decided to put the girl in that place because she heard the cough of an old lady inside the room. It was the first stimulate she hears, probably because was a sign for the grandmas inside to want a visit, or the nurse was annoyed and wanted to be free of the girl fast since Marian didn't specify what person wanted to see
Answer: A
Explanation: I don't really have an explanation besides that fact that my grandmother calls her cabinets and draws in her kitchen a buffet lol.