Answer:
Nanny Crawford is specking these words to her granddaughter Janie mae Crawford.
The daughter referred to in the speech is Leafy Crawford, Janie's mother and Nanny's daughter.
Explanation:
The excerpt is from Zora Neale Hurston's novel "Their Eyes Were Watching God". This book revolves round the theme of the discriminatory lives of the blacks among the white folks.
The passage is from the second chapter of the book where Janie's grandmother had told her about her choice of husband for her granddaughter. She told her of her slavery birth, her upbringing n the plantations and how it was tough for a girl to be a slave. And that is why she had wanted her to marry Logan Killicks who may be a much older guy but have the means to provide security and social standing for Janie.
Nanny or Grandma Crawford is talking to Janie about the prospect of marrying Killicks.
"Mah daughter" in the speech refers to Nanny's daughter Leafy Crawford, Janie's mother.
Answer:
Overgenerality, Taxonomy: Logical Fallacy > Informal Fallacy > Overgenerality Subfallacy: Hasty Generalization Example: As this is the 25th Anniversary of "Thriller" and, Mr. [Michael] Jackson’s worldwide sales have to date exceeded over 750 million units, Mr. Jackson is being recognised for his phenomenal, record-breaking achievements.
Tell me if somethings wrong with my answer! If there is!
Answer:
The setting of “The Youngest Doll” is a decaying sugar plantation in rural Puerto Rico, where an aging dollmaker lives with her nine nieces. She is a member of the “extinct sugarcane aristocracy” and the story takes place as her family's social position and wealth are rapidly disappearing
Explanation:
Answer:
I'm only having a guess here:
Two, empty, and several.
Explanation:
"Two"
describing how many bulldozers there are
"Empty"
describing the parking lot
"Several"
describing how many weeks the bulldozers have been in the parking lot for