The correct answer is false.
Kate Chopin lived through most of 19th century, and died in 1904. Women didn't get the right to vote until 1920, when the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, which allowed women to vote. So Kate Chopin died more than a decade before women could vote - she didn't see that happen before she died.
Opposite of 'still sick' ...5 letters ... ' cured '.
Opposite of 'forbade' ..... o - d - - - - .
I was going to say 'allowed' and that your 'o' and your 'd' are wrong.
But then I saw the other answer here that says 'ordered', and I certainly
go along with that.
The correct answer is the prefix “Trans” and the word is Transcontinental.
This prefix occurs in loanwords from Latin. It is used in words with the context of “going across”, “beyond”, or “through” in combination with the particulars of any origin.
Answer: "great, grey, stone wall", ''Sour smelling cement''
Explanation:
If we are trying to connect both the Berlin Wall picture and Inge's Wall (literary artwork) we must be aware of the story in that Inge's Wall is representing.
Inge's Wall story: In Inge's Wall, there is one wall with two sides, one side is unattainable and alive, unlike the other side where the main character Inge is living. Her side is grey, without color and lifeless. She discovered the bright side when she looked up through the one hole that she found on that wall and then she saw a different world, opposite of her own.
- If we compare the phrases with the picture, we can see that the wall is great, grey and from the stone and sour smelling cement because that was her point of view in the novel.
Since we cannot see much more, we cannot tell if there are busy traffic or laughter and music on the other side of the wall.