In this poem, a speaker describes the effects of Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on the bus for a white passenger. As you read, take notes on who “the Many” and “the Few” are. ... To celebrate the ride that marks The debt the Many owe the Few, That day of freedom grew into The Century of Rosa Parks.
Patrick Lewis' poem “The Many and the Few,” a speaker describes the historic moment when Rosa Parks refused to give her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama. As we read, we will be discussing the theme of Social Change & Revolution as it relates to the text.
I am not 100% sure, although I feel the best answer to this question is A. The poet is saying that people don't live long; life is short.
This is because he talks about someone remaining, or living on. You can infer from this that the poet believes that life feels short and brief. The poet doesn't mention beauty in this line, nor foes he express changes in his generation. However, D is still a possible answer, but he doesn't focus as much on himself and his unwant to grow old. I hope that this can help you out! :D
Answer: Lexington would talk about how important is work for teenagers, since the story of the hardworking Reagan is presented as an example.
Explanation: Lexington presents Reagan's story as a way of differing with many americans that claim summer jobs to be boring. Reagan was a harworker young man, who worked as a lifeguard, but in comparison to some teenagers, he would take it seriously to the point of saving people's lives from a river and scold them for it. He would wake up early and do his job for 12 hours a day, seven days a week. Therefore, If Lexington is presenting Reagan's hard routine, he would answer to a question like that by making the difference between lazy teenagers that complain about muscle ache and how they should value it, like Reagan.
Answer:
You could get two 'complete' sentences without the connection.
I guess I like your teacher for the Sonic reference.
<span>In sentence construction, a sentence must naturally have a subject and a
predicate. IN the sentences above, the most logical sentence where the verb
agrees with the subject is letter B with the sentence: Every soup and salad
cost less than five dollars. The subject here is the ‘soup and salad’ while the
predicate is ‘cost less than five dollars’. In cases like the sentence A: My
friend and her mother laughs at all my jokes. ‘friend and mother’ were supposed
to be the subjects however, the verb agreed to another subject at the end of
the sentence which is ‘all my jokes’. </span>