How would you personally feel if you were to know someone was going to get captured? Think about that and chose the most wise answer would you be angry? Scared? But also it needs to have more context because I don’t know Butch Cassidy and his character or her. You can cross of amused for sure though.
Write a introduction. Then add three paragraphs about what you did. Then add a conclusion closing the essay. That’s all you have to add
Answer:
D slave narrative
Explanation:
Olaudah Equiano's narrative is an example of slave narrative that became a powerful tool in the abolitionist movement.
<em>The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano </em>while being an autobiography is a slave narrative that describes the enslavement of Equiano and how he sought to become a free man through his study of the bible.
The book discusses the cross cultural an religious of the writer from slavery to freedom and traditional belief to Christianity. It is a book that explicitly narrates his experience as a slave and this was a powerful tool the abolitionists used to abolish slavery.
The correct answer is a.
The phrase considered worthy of debate is a participial phrase modifying. Issues; the phrase health insurance and the environment is the object of <span>include.</span>
Answer:
The narrator's intention for "unnaming" the animals is:
to become one with nature and have equality rather than showing domination over the creatures by labeling them with a name.
Explanation:
This question refers to the short story "She Unnames Them
", by author Ursula K. Le Guin. The narrator is Eve, the first woman created by God according to the Bible. In the story, Eve realizes the need to take back the names given to the animals, and even her own name. She unnames them. Some are hesitant, but in the end all animals accept remaining nameless. She notices then that her purpose has been fulfilled:
<em>They seemed far closer than when their names had stood between myself and them like a clear barrier: so close that my fear of them and their fear of me became one same fear. And the attraction that many of us felt, the desire to feel or rub or caress one another’s scales or skin or feathers or fur, taste one another’s blood or flesh, keep one another warm -- that attraction was now all one with the fear, and the hunter could not be told from the hunted, nor the eater from the food.</em>
Now, since there are no names to distinguish them, they are all the same. No separation is felt any longer. There are no classes, just "them". Eve then goes to Adam and gives her own name back. She is free, like the animals she unnamed, from the label once forced onto her.