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madreJ [45]
3 years ago
10

How did the king prevent the colonial population from growing?

English
2 answers:
Andre45 [30]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

By creating laws that made acquiring land difficult. ... Lucas explains that the use of "necessary" in the first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence.

inysia [295]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

What the drafters are saying here is that King George III has prevented the colonial population from expanding by ensuring the naturalization (becoming a citizen) process is hard if not impossible for foreigners. He also opposed colonial laws passed for the purpose of encouraging migration to America

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When general semanticists use the expression, "the map is not the territory," to which language barrier are they referring?
mario62 [17]

The expression<em> "the map is not the territory", </em>was first said by the Polish scientist, <em>Alfred Korzybski.</em>

It is a metaphor. There is the reality of something (as perceived by the senses).  And there are labels, symbols, abstraction of that reality created by the mind/thought for the sake  of convenience, communication, or to make undersanding easier. We are often looking at maps rather than the territory, without realising it. Mind is an expert at doing this.

Korzybski held that many people do confuse maps with territories, that is, confuse models of reality with reality itself. In other words, the description of the thing is not the thing itself. The model is not reality.

6 0
3 years ago
Write 4 choice of material affection your writing
andrey2020 [161]

Answer:

When someone asks you the effect on the reader, they are asking you what a particular piece of language makes you think, feel, or experience. This should be something that you weren’t thinking, feeling, or experiencing before you started reading: a book about a particular war might make you think differently about that war for the rest of your life; a story about something happy might make you feel a little brighter than you did that morning; an article about how all the little bones in your hand function might make you more aware of the tiny movements of each bone in your own hand as you type or write for the next hour.

Once you have worked out what your writer wants you to think, feel, or experience, you need to work out how they have tried to do this. This is where language and structural devices come in.

Let’s go back to our poor dog, splashing and struggling in the sea. Will someone eventually see him and save him?

Let’s look at the sentence I just wrote. Did it make you think feel, or experience anything? Perhaps not – but what do you think I wanted you to feel? Can you spot anything that might have been chosen to make you hopeful, sympathetic, or able to hear the sound of the dog in the water? If this was the quote you were asked to analyse, you might pick out the following things:

Rhetorical question – Did you notice that I used a question mark to create a rhetorical question? I was trying to make you think about who could save the dog, and how they might notice him there in the water. I was trying to encourage you to feel hopeful that this would happen.

Emotive language – Perhaps you noticed that I used the adjective ‘poor’ and the verb ‘struggling’. These are examples of emotive word choice, designed to make you feel sympathetic towards the dog. As humans, we generally care about people and animals that are in danger, so these words are designed to tug on your heart strings and feel sorry for this creature.

Alliteration and onomatopoeia – You might notice, if you read it aloud, that I used a lot of words that begin with the letter ‘s’, including the homophones ‘sea’ and ‘see’. This is a particular type of alliteration that creates the effect of ‘sibilance’ – a sort of hissing sound that could mimic the sound of the waves splashing as the dog tries to swim. I also used the onomatopoeia word ‘splashing’ with its powerful ‘sh’ sound to help you hear the struggle even more clearly.

If you are unsure of any of these language devices, you can sign up for a Get My Grades subscription to gain access to all our literary device Learn pages, which are full of information and advice about how to spot and use devices like the ones we’ve just looked at.

Explanation:

7 0
2 years ago
Which statement best describes the effect of alliteration in this stanza?
Nutka1998 [239]
I can’t see the stanza, but generally, alliteration can help add mood and sometimes tone to the writing. The repetitiveness can add a cadence to the poem.
7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The American dream is open to interpretation.
elena55 [62]

Hello. You did not present the answer options, which makes it impossible for your question to be answered. However, I will try to help you in the best possible way.

In general, we can affirm that the detail that supports the definition shown in the question above, is that which presents the different ways of interpreting the American dream. To find this detail, you must read all the answer options and identify the one that shows how the American dream has different meanings and that this dream can be associated with many different things, not being something rigid and immutable, but something dynamic and adaptable to different realities.

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3 years ago
The following question is based on your readings of “The Wanderer”
Svetlanka [38]
Since 'The Wanderer' is about a man who is alone after a war, there is no one to talk to, his who family is gone, and he has nowhere to go, the correct answer is D, 'pain of homelessness'. 
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3 years ago
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