Answer:
Esperanza does not want to grow up like her mother.
Explanation:
I would say that this is the answer. Options 2 and 3 don't seem to have anything to do with her mother. Option 1 is talking about the smell of Esperanza's mother's hair and not necessarily about her mother as a person. Option 4 sounds like the only one that is talking about her mother.
Okay, okay, okay, okay
Okay, okay, oh
You live in my dream state
Relocate my fantasy
I stay in reality
You live in my dream state
Hello. You forgot to enter the answer options. The options are:
Nature produces clean beauty from the rotting bodies of dead humans.
Nature can hurt us through the poison in the earth, air, and water.
Nature appears deceptively safe when actually it is quite dangerous.
Nature's cycles are just like a human's life cycle.
Answer:
Nature produces clean beauty from the rotting bodies of dead humans.
Explanation:
In "This Compost," Whitman shows an alternative view of nature that we rarely find in poems. He shows that nature, in addition to being beautiful, is a large deposit of cadavers, which is in stark contrast to the idealized view of nature that poets propose to us. In this poem, the poet decided to portray, death, rot and decay of what dies and is left on earth, which even before that, manages to produce life, beauty and fruit.
Answer:Each battery has two metal terminals. One is marked positive (+), the other negative (-). There are also positive and negative cables in the jumper cable set. The red one is positive (+), the black one is negative (-).
Explanation:
By how well he or she does the job