Answer:
Langston Hughes' message about group pressure in "Salvation" is that B. It can cause people to make decisions they could later regret.
Explanation:
Langston Hughes told his story about how he attended a church revival meeting with his aunt when he was 12 years old.
In his memoir, he recalls going for that revival full of faith about God but leaving the place doubting God.
He felt pressured by his aunt to receive salvation at that revival but ends up lying about his feelings and loses faith in God. He was the last person that was "waiting to be saved" and so he lied because of group pressure so as not to "hold up the procession"
I think that this is something everyone has a different opinion on. It's not based around one thing. Someone may value trustworthiness most, while others may value loyalty, humility, humor, affection, etc. There's many possible answers to this.
These are the correct answers:
1. comforting
2. They give examples from their own lives.
3. Most teachers lose sight of what is best for their students.
4. life
5. proficient speakers of English.
6. The sounds of English have become too familiar to him.
7. their resentment toward their fathers for bad decisions that they made.
8. wondering about the choices she has made and how they have affected her child.
9. give the reader a sense of a sailor’s relationship to water.
10. to help readers understand the speaker’s wistful desire for liberty.
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C. Please hand me the big,blue notebook