Answer:
,....................,......
Explanation:
who are u talking about mention the name please or i couldn't understand my boy
The correct answer is: "Allied forces came in and crushed the rebellion".
The Boxer Rebellion took place in China between 1899 and 1901, and it constituted an anti-imperalist, anti-christian and anti-colonial movement, that fought against the imposition of the influence and culture of Western countries, due to colonialism procedures.
As a response, Allied forces arrived to China and extinguished this rebellion. Those forces came from the US, the Astro-Hungarian Empire, Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Russia.
<span>The correct answer is letter B.
A STIGMA is a social identity that develops when a person is socially devalued by others because of an identifiable characteristic. Every society holds in itself a certain stigma because people are expected to act accordingly to what is deemed "normal" or "regular" by society. Something that does not fit in such criteria is held with much regard and is completely judged by society. </span>
Both poems tell of a male speaker's longing for a woman, but their tone could not be more different. The speaker of Poe's "The Raven" is morose and melancholy; he is thinking of Lenore, his dead love, when a raven flies in. He masochistically questions the bird, each time receiving the same answer: "Nevermore", which he takes to mean that he will never again see Lenore. His insistent questioning is seen as sign of mental instability, since he knows the bird cannot give him a true answer, and yet persists in his questions.
Yeats's poem, on the other hand, tells of a fleeting vision of a woman, perhaps a faery. The speaker then begins his wandering in search for her. Though the poem is also melancholic, it is a lighter sort of melancholy. Though we may surmise that the speaker shall never find her, he himself has not lost hope and his wanderings seem less gloomy than the dreariness of Poe's poem. His goal (kiss her lips and take her hands) has a sensuality that dispels any sense of doom.