Yes, Australia is located below the Equator in the Southern Hemisphere.
Hope this helps!!
I think it would be "graph"
Also, didn't someone just ask this??
The following is the best summary of this passage: "Brutus asks if he has offended anyone, and they say no. He then asserts that he has not done anything to Caesar that the people would not do to him, and that Caesar’s triumphs have not been downplayed, nor have his crimes been exaggerated. As Antony enters with Caesar’s body, Brutus says that Antony had no part in killing Caesar, but will benefit from his death, just as all the people will. Finally, he says that he killed his best friend for the good of Rome, and he expects the people to do the same to him if Rome will benefit."
What makes it a good summary is that it brings out the main ideas of the text and restates them shortly and cleary:
- Brutus has indeed not gone against the will of the people by murdering Caesar: "none have I offended;"
- Brutus acknowledges the fact that he removed a ruler for the people and that he expects the same people to remove him as well if they deem it beneficial: "I have done no more to Caesar than you shall do to Brutus" and "I have the same dagger for myself, when it shall please my country to need my death;"
- Brutus wants to be fair by alluding to both Caesar's exploits and his failures: "his glory not extenuated, ... nor his offences enforced;"
- he also said that Antony was not guilty of Caesar's murder but that it is still advantageous for him: "though he had no hand in his death, shall receive the benefit of his dying;"
- finally, Brutus believes that his deed was a sacrifice in the interest of Rome: "I slew my best lover for the good of Rome."
Answer:
They respond differently to their situation.
Explanation:
Based on the entire excerpt, the statement which best describes the Cuban exiles in Dreaming in Cuban is they respond differently to their situation.
Dreaming in Cuban is the first novel written by an author named Cristina García,a native of the United States, and she was a finalist for the National Book Award. This novel was published in 1992 by a publisher named
Alfred A. Knopf.
The novel moves amod Cuba and the United States featuring three generations of a single family. The novel center of interest was particularly on the women—Celia del Pino, her daughters Lourdes and Felicia, and her granddaughter Pilar.
In summary, The novel's central themes comprises or covers family relationships, exile, memory, and the divisiveness of politics.