ok so i assume ur very mental n r-tarded so u should psychiatric its for r-tards like u Explanation:
Hello. You forgot to say that this question is about the article "America and I".
Answer:
The author realized that the pilgrims did not expect the sympathy and help of the natives to create the America they wanted, she also should not wait, but she should, like the pilgrims, overcome difficulties and create their America.
Explanation:
In "America and I" the author reveals her experience as an immigrant in America, who arrived in search of the American dream and realized that things did not work exactly as she expected, especially in relation to the treatment of Americans towards her, who was quite hostile and did not convey any sympathy. The author reveals that this made her very melancholy and disgusted about the country she longed to live in, however, while reading about the history of the USA, she saw that the pilgrims who started this country also did not find empathy and kindness from the natives, for on the contrary, they were received with hostility, in addition to having to face hunger, cold, pests and all the insecurity that the new environment provided, to build the America that they had aimed for.
She saw herself just like the pilgrims and realized that the Americans, like the Native Americans, treated her the way they did because they had never lived with foreigners, but their America was already built and she, like the pilgrims, should win adversity and build her America.
<span>The question is asking to find best definition of “societal norms”?Societal norms are a set of rules (norms means rules) that a society considers acceptable or valid, that it often requires and follows: for example the killing is unacceptable and that parents should take care of their children or that the political system should be democratic.</span><span />
Answer:
A supporter of the republic who believes strongly in a government guided by the votes of senators. While Brutus loves Caesar as a friend, he opposes the ascension of any single man to the position of dictator, and he fears that Caesar aspires to such power. Brutus’s inflexible sense of honor makes it easy for Caesar’s enemies to manipulate him into believing that Caesar must die in order to preserve the republic. While the other conspirators act out of envy and rivalry, only Brutus truly believes that Caesar’s death will benefit Rome. Unlike Caesar, Brutus is able to separate completely his public life from his private life; by giving priority to matters of state, he epitomizes Roman virtue. Torn between his loyalty to Caesar and his allegiance to the state, Brutus becomes the tragic hero of the play.
Answer:
doesn't
Explanation:
just need to get to 20 characters