Answer:
1. The thougher it gets the more I know the reward and lessons will be
2. I know it's hard but karma always has a way of bringing fate to each other, if it was meant to be it was meant to be
3. I cannot risk my life and the chance of not seeing my family again not just to gain anything
4. as far as it takes to reach my goal
5. whatever it takes either road, air, or sea.
6. I don't need to find my way home, I need to find my way further.
7. Mentally, socially and psycologically
8. it will make me stronger to see them for the better
Answer:
Hurston describes herself as a brown bag among white, yellow, and red bags. Each bag has a jumble of contents both marvelous and ordinary, such as a “first-water diamond” or a “dried flower or two still a little fragrant.” The differently colored bags are Hurston's central metaphor for her mature understanding of race.
it is in chronological order because it's a how to which is also a step by step if you need me to explain more add another question and put
Jade2408
on it !
Answer:
By using words like glides, wave, and silver, the poem expresses the appearance of the snake.
Explanation:
Answer:
B) It serves to point out that basing the justification of slavery on the story of Ham is unsound.
Explanation:
Frederick Douglass's memoir "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass" contains the slave days and younger days of the author and progresses to his own education and eventual freedom from being a slave. The memoir served and continues to serve as one of the greatest proofs of life writings by a former slave.
In the very first chapter of the memoir, Douglass mentioned how <em>"God cursed Ham and therefore American slavery is right"</em>. But, he counters this point by stating that <em>"If the lineal descendants of Ham are alone to be scripturally enslaved, it is certain that slavery at the south must soon become unscriptural; for thousands are ushered into the world, annually, who, like myself, owe their existence to white fathers, and those fathers most frequently their own masters."</em>
This allusion to the biblical story of how God cursed the sons of Ham to be <em>"the lowest of slaves"</em> (Genesis 9:24) among his brothers serves as a means to bring out the point that<u> justifying slavery based on this biblical story is unsound and even maybe untrue.</u>
Thus, the <u>correct answer is option B</u>.g