The evidence from the text which supports the conclusion that Brutus and Cassius are in conflict is, “Brutus, bay not me. / I’ll not endure it.”
“Away, slight man!”
Answer: Option D and E.
Explanation:
The 'Tragedy of Julius Caesar' is a play written by William Shakespeare which is a play about the honorable hero. From the above mentioned dialogue between Brutus and Cassius, we can infer that they both are in conflict. Cassius says that he is not going to endure something which means he isn't suffer or experience it alone. To this, Brutus just gives a sight. Sight means insulting someone by not giving them proper attention. So in a way, both Cassius and Brutus are trying to indicate themselves as better than the other which in turn shows that they're in conflict.
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Explanation:
The answer is onomatopoeia.
Key work; Bleated
Answer:
Anarchists
Explanation:
According to the excerpt from "Civil Disobedience", it is described by the narrator that he is unlike the "no-government men" who doesn't want any form of government, but rather he wants a better government.
From this narration, the term that could best replace "no-government men" in the excerpt is anarchists.
This is because an anarchist is a person that does not want any form of government, but rather disorder and chaos.
In Langston Hughes' "I, Too", he speaks of how segregation existed in his present times and how he had to show tolerance towards those who shun him, but how that would not always be the case. His metaphor begins when he states that people "... send me to eat in the kitchen." while everyone else eats at the table. So he's set aside and left behind by society while everyone else carries a normal life. However, he doesn't fall for self pity but "laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.", waiting for the day when he will <em>sit at the table</em> and no one will dare to send him away as they will be able to see his value.
This is an extended metaphor as it is not confined to a phrase or sentence, but rather used throughout the whole text.