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tigry1 [53]
3 years ago
8

What type of figurative language fits this sentence or phrase: "Because the way you grow old is kind of like an onion...."

English
2 answers:
Kobotan [32]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

simile

Explanation:

Angelina_Jolie [31]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

simile

Explanation:

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Plzzz helpppp i have 20 min to finish!!
kicyunya [14]

Answer:

B. They show how Jewish people became the target of  hatred during World War II.

Explanation:

The both paragraphs (i.e paragraph 5 and 6) reveal how the Jewish were hated, maltreated and even shunned. They were blamed for the problems of the society. As a result of that, they became the target of hatred during World War II. Hitler resolved to annihilate the Jews. The Nazis built more concentration camps were they captured and imprisoned the Jews and left them there to starve to death or be killed.

Option B is the correct answer.

5 0
3 years ago
What helps someone open up?
Helga [31]

Answer:

any down below

Explanation:

-having someone who can keep your problems to their selves

-not being fake

-support

- loyalty

- person that gives advice

4 0
2 years ago
How does Jacqueline get her name?
Goryan [66]
You need to give more context. I will help when you do. God bless!
7 0
3 years ago
Roy Ebihara and Aiko Ebihara seek to recover something that was taken from each of them when they and their families were remove
melomori [17]

Answer:

They seek to regain pride in who they are. This desire is understandable, because their nationality and ethnicity made them go through very difficult situations, which could cause shame and hostility against their own ethnicity and culture.

Explanation:

Roy Ebihara and Aiko Ebihara are a Japanese couple who were forced to leave their homes as children and live in Japanese concentration camps in the USA.

The concentration camps for Japanese people were a bad environment of extreme misery and violence. The Japanese were moved there, just for who they are, for their culture and customs. This caused many Japanese to lose the pride of their ethnicity, wishing to be other people and often denying their own roots.

Now, years after this historic event, Roy Ebihara and Aiko Ebihara wish to recover that pride and this is totally justified, because our ethnicity defines our high self-esteem and our perception of ourselves.

6 0
3 years ago
3) How has Katniss been adopted by political parties in the United States?
vlada-n [284]

AJennifer Lawrence in Hunger Games: Catching Fire

'Sure Katniss Everdeen is an idealised fantasy anti-authoriatarian heroine … What she isn’t is either 'girly' or interested in riches.' Photograph: Allstar/Lionsgate/Sportsphoto Ltd

All hail Katniss Everdeen of The Hunger Games trilogy. If you are the mother of a pre-teen girl, you will know the whispered relief around these films. "About time. Go!" If you would like your teenage daughter to see something other than the underclass sobbing on a crass talent show, orange twentysomethings Botoxing themselves, or girls who are just "naturally thin" and who giggle when their clothes just drop off, then you will already know about them. If, like me, you simply would like to see a young woman not defined by her relationship to men, crack open the pick 'n' mix.

Clearly I am not alone. Nor is my youngest. Catching Fire, the sequel to The Hunger Games, has had the fourth biggest box office weekend opening in history. Ever since the first film came out, my daughter read the books by Suzanne Collins and we have a shrine to Peeta, Katniss's fellow contestant.

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The books are neither warm nor easy, but then dystopian futures of totalitarian states (Panem, as it is called) only work when they're not so far from the imagination. In The Hunger Games, the rich and powerful control the Capitol and dress in grotesque Gaga-ish costumes while the poor live out in the Districts and are treated with increasing contempt.

This is a police state where "peacekeepers" kill and torture. Hegemony is maintained by giving them very little – that's why Katniss learned to hunt illegally – but staging huge spectacles: each District is "reaped" to find two people who are chosen for the televised Hunger Games.

So this is a satire on the kind of TV that its target audience watches. The games are a brutal contest to kill every other contestant. It is the logical conclusion of reality TV: survival of the fittest. At the centre of this is Katniss, played by the sparky Jennifer Lawrence, who is seen on red carpets in apparently awful outfits. What do I know? Every time I read these gown-downs, as I call them, I like the ones the fashionistas hate (Bjork wearing a swan being my all-time favourite). We have seen Lawrence being chatted up on camera by sleazoid Jack Nicholson, who, to be fair, is only three times her age. And we have seen her lose it in front of the paparazzi, screaming: "Stop. Stop. Stop." So she isn't just acting cool, she is cool and aware that she wants to keep her body healthy-looking, not a size zero.

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The obligation to be a role model is daunting and modern. I can't remember wanting to be anyone other than Mr Spock and David Bowie. The female bit is blank – my memory is only full of girls I did not want to be or never imagined I could be.

Since then, we pretty much have a roll-call of politically correct heroines, but still have to go some way back to find tough, independent women, from Linda Hamilton in Terminator to Sigourney Weaver in Alien, or Tarantino's fantasy of Uma Thurman in Kill Bill. Japanese cinema has produced some magnificent female characters, and, of course, we rewrite the "final girl" of the horror genre: in which, after several women have been raped/killed/tortured, the final girl turns the table and survives.

Lately though, for teenage girls, we have had Twilight's mopey and passive Bella Swan. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is long gone, so to see Katniss (more akin to Neo in The Matrix) as resilient and smart and reluctantly becoming a symbol of a revolution is quite something. Guys fall in love with her but she really has better things to do: the uprising. Unlike Russell Brand's fluffier talk of revolution, the movies do not shy away from the violence and executions that accompany the suppression of dissent, with the great Donald Sutherland's watery eyes conveying pure evil as the president.

Sure, Katniss is an idealised fantasy anti-authoriatarian heroine. She is also confused, stubborn and vulnerable. What she isn't is either "girly" or interested in riches. She makes her bow and arrows to bring down the system. Nothing is said about gender. She is taller than one of her partners and it's her physical and mental prowess that we root for.

i hope it will help you

please mark as brainliest

and rate it

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
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