The answer is c I did that before
Izeah was my College best friend who I was able to confide in for any problems. He was the only person I really felt I had a true connection with considering that I have very few friends and so did he. I learned to love Isaias in a matter of weeks as something more than a friend, I considered him a brother. I myself have an older brother but he doesn’t love me or my dad which is something that has taken a deep scar within my heart. Izeah and me got along very well and for some time I told him that I was studying the Bible with Jehovah Witness and that I planned to become one soon. Nothing between him and me changed, I still kept in contact with him because I cared much for him. Then, one day I got a text from him saying that he didn’t want to be my friend anymore; those words hit me very deeply. I was very sad and hurt. He said to me that my new religion was something he wasn’t used to and wanted to part ways. I wanted to ask him if he wanted to work things out but I decided not to answer and left things just the way they were because if he were truly my friend he wouldn’t put conditions to our friendship. For many weeks I got depressed. Loosing his friendship was like having a dagger trespass my heart. Till today I still miss Izeah and I sometimes feel sad because he distanced himself from me. However, I am much happier today then I was two years ago when Izeah was still my friend because I confided inside Jehovah and I have friends today that love me, care for me and console me when I most need it.
Hope this helps, call out for me if you need anything else :D
Answer:
The blacks in America were deemed inferior and only seen as someone lesser, like a young boy among adults. Maybe, this is one reason why Wright uses the word "boy" in his title.
Explanation:
Richard Wright's memoir "Black Boy" presents the author's childhood and also growing up years as a black man in the American South. The book deals with themes of growing up, racism, family, and also a sense of trying to find his identity.
The use of the word "boy" in the title is ironic because Wright may be describing his childhood experiences but at the same time, the memoir covers well beyond his childhood years too. This may also have to do with his feeling of still being a kid despite being an adult.
Also important is how the blacks were perceived by the whites, the "superior" whites. Though same in all senses, blacks were hardly accepted by the whites as their own or equals, and more like inferior and lesser than them. This can also be one reason why Wright uses the word "boy", as a generalization of how his black people were perceived by the whites.
Quotations marks.
Mary said to Billy "hi, how are you"
Answer:
Woolf imagines that Shakespeare had a sister with a gift equal to his. “Any woman born with a great gift in the sixteenth century would certainly have gone crazed, shot herself, or ended her days in some lonely cottage outside the village, half witch, half wizard, feared and mocked at. ... publicity in women is detestable.
Explanation: