Answer:
Yes.
Explanation:
They were considered traitors because of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The government became worried that citizens of Japanese ancestry would act as spies or saboteurs or otherwise pose threats like espionage against America. At the time, nearly 120,000 people fell into this category. Around two-thirds of that number were full-fledged citizens (born and raised here) of the United States. But, anti-japanese propoganda that caused fear and suspicion among the public encouraged the Roosevelt administration to forcibly send them away from their homes (across the country) to the internment camps.
These lines are correct:
<span>The other motive,
Why to a public count I might not go,
Is the great love the general gender bear him;
Who, dipping all his faults in their affection,
Work, like the spring that turneth wood to stone,
so that my arrows,
Too slightly timber'd for so loud a wind,
Would have reverted to my bow again,
But not where I have aim'd them
Here, Claudius is clearly saying that he cannot accuse Hamlet of anything because the people in Denmark love their prince, so even if he did try to accuse him, nobody would believe him anyway. This is why he doesn't want to accuse Hamlet of Polonious's murder like that, but rather reveal the secret in other ways.
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Your answer is A The term iambic pentameter refers to a line of poetry with ten syllables with stress put on every other syllable
He just tries to say what the character is doing to get an idea of the story
Answer:
The Greatest Showman is a musical about P T Barnum and how he created a circus. The characters played their roles beautifully, specifically Zendaya and Keala Settle. The way that the songs were interlaced with the characters movements and actions was spot on and perfectly in sync. One weak point would be when Rebecca Ferguson is lip singing Never enough on stage, and she doesn't pull it off smoothly. The overall message that you are perfect just the way you are is portrayed beautifully throughout the entire movie.