What evidence from the text best supports the theme that the roles of women are defined by society?
"You have loved me as a wife ought to love her husband. Only you had not sufficient knowledge to judge of the means you used."
"But do you suppose you are any the less dear to me, because you don't understand how to act on your own responsibility?"
"I will advise you and direct you. I should not be a man if this womanly helplessness did not just give you a double attractiveness in my eyes."
"You must not think anymore about the hard things I said in my first moment of consternation, when I thought everything was going to overwhelm me."
Answer:
"I will advise you and direct you. I should not be a man if this womanly helplessness did not just give you a double attractiveness in my eyes."
Explanation:
The evidence from the text that best supports the theme that the roles of women are defined by society is "I will advise you and direct you. I should not be a man if this womanly helplessness did not just give you a double attractiveness in my eyes.".
Traditionally, the role of women has been looked at as one that needs guidance from her husband and one who needs to perform the role of a wife dutifully, it is what society expects of her. So, the correct answer is option C.
Answer:
Aggressive and hostile.
Explanation:
Based on the given excerpt from "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God", the denotation of the word 'fierceness' as used in the excerpt is aggressive and hostile.
Denotation is simply the representation of a word in its literal sense. According to the excerpt, the narrator explains that facing the fierceness of God for even one moment would be dreadful.
Its a dependent clause
and i think you meant "until" im not the grammar police but just sayin
Answer:
lol
rent u in high school asking an amplyfy qeat
Explanation:
Frederick Douglass's purpose<span> in </span>writing his<span> autobiography was not only to show the way in which slavery degraded slaves but also to show the way the institution of slavery degraded slave masters.</span>