Answer:
provide instruction for the illiterate.
Explanation:
Answer:
The most reasonable plot prediction is that Huck will confidently face his father.
Explanation:
The evidence on the excerpt suggests that something has clicked in Huck and he has encounter a new strenght of mind to face an old conflict. For instance: "I used to be scared of him all the time, he tanned me so much. I reckoned I was scared now, too; but in a minute I see I was mistaken". Huck recognises a fear and a situation with which he is familiar, yet he feels differently. Also: "... but right away after I see I warn't scared of him worth bothring about." This is the realisation that the situation no longer controls him but the other way around, so it is safe to assume that he'll be able to deal with it differently (whereas before he was scared and vulnerable, now he is more determined and confident).
<span>Achieving egalitarian
(among gender, women and children), or being an egalitarian, is hard to achieve
since not all people want to be in equal footing with everyone. However we
could lessen its prevalence: (1) educate people about the effects of
inequality; (2) engage them in talks that relates to being empathetic with the
inferior group; and (3) educate the inferior, let them know their rights and
(4) socialization, through this, both sexes will know each other’s perspective
onto things.</span>
Answer:
The quotations from “A Quilt of a Nation” that develop the author’s viewpoint that America’s diversity is what unifies it are:
"That's because it was built of bits and pieces that seem discordant, like the crazy quilts that have been one of its great folk-art forms, velvet and calico and checks and brocades. Out of many, one. That is the ideal."
and...
"These are the representatives of a mongrel nation that somehow, at times like this, has one spirit."
Explanation:
These two quotations talk about putting together things that are totally different so they can work in a whole.
The major risk of an close brain injury is a stoke