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katovenus [111]
3 years ago
7

If not for Roosevelt’s polio diagnosis, do you believe that he would have visited Georgia and created New Deal programs to aid r

ural Georgians? Why or why not?
English
1 answer:
blsea [12.9K]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Sharecropping had become a way of life for many farmers, black and Only Roosevelt himself can know what exactly transpired in his mind, but The programs of the New Deal responded to the social crisis. If he had not learned about the sufferings of Georgians by listening to What We D0

Explanation:

I hope it helps

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1. Suppose the writer's purpose had been to describe the Moffats' perception of Meg. Did the writer accomplish this goal?
Serga [27]

Answer: No, because the essay is about Meg’s perception of herself.

Explanation:

Nowhere in the essay does it state any opinion or perception about Meg through the eyes of the Moffats. It’s more describing the evolution of Meg herself and how she starts to enjoy emulating the Moffats in ways (like dressing and mannerisms) and how she starts to feel about home.

4 0
3 years ago
How do the contrasts described in paragraph 2
givi [52]

Answer:The uni trimester ended while leaves still clung to the trees. Betsie found herself missing the crunching sound of the fallen leaves as she travelled home, the audible sound of autumn weather that usually meant it was holiday time.

Elaine greeted her daughter at the door. A candle burned on the fireplace, it resembled a small amount of warmth yet to come.

Arthur had gone to collect wood, Elaine told Betsie. “He’s losing it. I’m over him. I know we had you late and all, and it is harder I guess when you have a child at a late age but it’s not you that worries me. You are fine!”

Elaine plonked her rear down on the floral armchair, it rocked a little then came back to centre – she didn’t flinch when the hot tea soaked her leg.

It reminded Betsie of a time when she watched her mother push material underneath the foot of the sewing needle. The chain roared while Elaine’s fingers pressed the material. Then she watched as her mother’s finger slipped underneath the foot, punctured by the sharp end of the needle which went all the way through her finger. Elaine didn’t flinch, she finished running that edge, then licked her finger between her thin lips before changing the edge around. Betsie had stared at her mother in wonder.

“I don’t not love Arthur but I don’t like him.” Elaine sipped her tea and it spilled over her chin on to her knitted woollen cardigan.

The candle flickered against the wall above the fire.

“Jane told me, you know young Jane, the teacher next door? She told me that she saw Arthur at the car out front and you know what he said to her? He said ‘I thought I saw a blonde girl walking towards me and I’m blind enough that I couldn’t see her until she was on top of me.’ Then he got in his car and drove off! I’ve told him not to drive. But you know.”

“Mum, cars have always been Arthur’s passion.”

Elaine’s eyes flickered.

Arthur appeared at the arched entry to the lounge room. “You’re near the sex candle. Cost me a lot of sex, that candle!”

“Arthur! Your daughter has come home.”

Arthur giggled. “Whoops! How are you dear?”

“Good dad.”

“Come out back and I’ll show you the beast.”

“New car dad?”

“Old car-new engine!”

“Great!”

Arthur and Betsie left Elaine and the candle flickering in the lounge room.

In the shed they examined a beautiful old Willy’s Jeep with a motor cradled in the bonnet, still chained up on the hoist.

“Now darling,” he turned to his daughter. “I know what you’re thinking. Another car! This old cob can’t deserve another car, can he? But with your mum and all, it’s been hard. Her dementia is getting worse and, well, I need some space.”

Arthur’s eyes flickered.

“I do love your mum. It’s just that, sometimes I don’t like her.”

Explanation:

6 0
2 years ago
Which is the best example of how to use a hyphen? amus-ing all-star sis-ter in-vite
murzikaleks [220]
All-star is the best example it shouldnt interrupt a word
8 0
3 years ago
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O texto a seguir está no tempo presente simples. Os verbos em negrito devem ser passados para o Passado Simples. Releia as regra
blsea [12.9K]
Last Answer!! D (Arrived/ Worked/ Returned/ Helped/ Talked/ Watched)
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3 years ago
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Read the stanza from “Eldorado.” And, as his strength Failed him at length, He met a pilgrim shadow– “Shadow,” said he, “Where c
VARVARA [1.3K]

Answer:

AABCCD

Explanation:

Edgar Allen Poe's poem "Eldorado" talks of a knight who journeys through<em> "sunshine ... and shadow</em>", looking for the lost paradise city of Eldorado. The poem is a similar theme of looking for the lost city and how it has caught the interest of many explorers.

The rhymes scheme of a poem refers to the way the words are used in each line of a poem. In the given lines taken from the third stanza of the poem, the rhyme scheme is AABCCD.

Considering the lines of the poem,

<em>And, as his </em><u><em>strength</em></u><em> (A) </em>

<em>Failed him at </em><u><em>length</em></u><em>, (A) </em>

<em>He met a pilgrim </em><u><em>shadow</em></u><em>— (B) </em>

<em>‘Shadow,’ said </em><u><em>he</em></u><em>, (C) </em>

<em>‘Where can it </em><u><em>be</em></u><em>— (C) </em>

<em>This land of </em><u><em>Eldorado</em></u><em>?’ (D)</em>

the end word in the first line is "strength", with the same rhyme as "length". So, if we put "A" as the symbol for the first rhyming words, then "shadow" can be put as "B" and "he" and "be" of the third and fourth lines can be written as C. Likewise, "Eldorado" is put as "D".

Thus, the sequence comes as AABCCD.

3 0
3 years ago
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