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stich3 [128]
3 years ago
13

Which of the following were negative things experience by African Americans living under the sharecropping system? Check all the

boxes that apply? ​
English
2 answers:
djyliett [7]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Theres nothing there. Theres no boxes.

Explanation:

Aneli [31]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

A,C,D, F

Explanation:

mark me brainlist!

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HAMLET'S DULL REVENGE
LiRa [457]

<span>1.     </span>The main argument in this essay is that if the audience does not accept the villain the poet (specifically Shakespeare here) writes, then Shakespeare will become the villain of his own play.

<span>2.     </span>In lines 25-44 the author is supporting the fact that the poet is completely at the mercy of his audience. Sometimes the reception by the audience has nothing to do with the play itself, it might be differences from audience to audience based on who is there and how they are feeling on that particular night.

<span>
3. Shakespeare cannot give up revenge because it is what the audience wants. The author says that “tragedy is revenge”. If he gives up revenge, he is giving up his audience and therefore his entire basis of work. </span>

<span>
4. The author presents this information directly from the text because the structure of the lines is as important as what they are saying. Hamlet presents the images of his father and his uncle next to each other, and the meter of the lines represents that back and forth of comparison by mirroring each other. “This was your husband/Here is your husband”. The repetition with slight changes in description show the contrast better than a summary could.  </span>

<span>
5. The author says this is a “catchy example” because Hamlet needs to adopt the same sense of grand military action towards Claudius for his revenge as Fortinbras does for what seems like nothing. Hamlet needs, like Fortinbras, to be willing to throw away everything for “an eggshell”. </span>

<span>
6. Laertes is like the actor that played Hecuba because he is able to turn on his tears and emotions even if it contradicts what he is feeling inside. This similarity suggests that Laertes cares more about the show of things, in the same way he seems to care more about the ceremony surrounding Ophelia’s burial than her death itself, than the things themselves. It shows that he is all for show rather than sincerity. </span>

<span>
7. These lines relate to the author’s argument because it reinforces the idea that the audience is actually in control of the play. It shows examples of lines that represent the height of the trauma and tragedy, so that the audience knows the ending is near. </span>

<span>
8. Gertrude refers to Hamlet’s outburst as “madness” and he refers to his own outburst as “towering passion.” The differences here are in who the audience chooses to believe. If the audience follows Gertrude’s lead by thinking he is mad, they will receive the ending differently than if they trust Hamlet himself that his outbursts are an outpouring of passion. </span>

 

5 0
4 years ago
Help me please……………………
prohojiy [21]
It’s either b or c, i would honestly go with b
3 0
3 years ago
Describe how you might use elaboration to remember a piece of important information
elena-14-01-66 [18.8K]
Elaborating a point of information helps us break it down into reasons and approach it logically, meaning we do not have to memorize a random piece of information, but we have a complete picture of it. This helps in memorization. 
7 0
4 years ago
Basic rules of grammer
Likurg_2 [28]

Answer:

"1. A sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a period/full stop, a question mark or an exclamation mark. see Punctuation

The fat cat sat on the mat.

Where do you live?

My dog is very clever!

2. The order of a basic positive sentence is Subject-Verb-Object. (Negative and question sentences may have a different order.)

John loves Mary.

They were driving their car to Bangkok.

3. Every sentence must have a subject and a verb. An object is optional. Note that an imperative sentence may have a verb only, but the subject is understood.

John teaches.

John teaches English.

Stop! (ie You stop!)

4. The subject and verb must agree in number, that is a singular subject needs a singular verb and a plural subject needs a plural verb.

John works in London.

That monk eats once a day.

John and Mary work in London.

Most people eat three meals a day.

5. When two singular subjects are connected by or, use a singular verb. The same is true for either/or and neither/nor.

John or Mary is coming tonight.

Either coffee or tea is fine.

Neither John nor Mary was late.

6. Adjectives usually come before a noun (except when a verb separates the adjective from the noun).

I have a big dog.

She married a handsome Italian man.

(Her husband is rich.)

7. When using two or more adjectives together, the usual order is opinion-adjective + fact-adjective + noun. (There are some additional rules for the order of fact adjectives.)

I saw a nice French table.

That was an interesting Shakespearian play.

8. Treat collective nouns (eg committee, company, board of directors) as singular OR plural. In BrE a collective noun is usually treated as plural, needing a plural verb and pronoun. In AmE a collective noun is often treated as singular, needing a singular verb and pronoun.

The committee are having sandwiches for lunch. Then they will go to London. (typically BrE)

The BBC have changed their logo. (typically BrE)

My family likes going to the zoo. (typically AmE)

CNN has changed its logo. (typically AmE)

9. The words its and it's are two different words with different meanings.

The dog has hurt its leg.

He says it's two o'clock.

10. The words your and you're are two different words with different meanings.

Here is your coffee.

You're looking good.

11. The words there,  and they're are three different words with different meanings.

There was nobody at the party.

I saw their new car.

Do you think they're happy?

12. The contraction he's can mean he is OR he has. Similarly, she's can mean she is OR she has, and it's can mean it is OR it has, and John's can mean John is OR John has.

He is working

He has finished.

She is here.

She has left.

John is married.

John has divorced his wife.

13. The contraction he'd can mean he had OR he would. Similarly, they'd can mean they had OR they would.

He had eaten when I arrived.

He would eat more if possible.

They had already finished.

They would come if they could.

14. Spell a proper noun with an initial capital letter. A proper noun is a "name" of something, for example Josef, Mary, Russia, China, British Broadcasting Corporation, English.

We have written to Mary.

Is China in Asia?

Do you speak English?

15. Spell proper adjectives with an initial capital letter. Proper adjectives are made from proper nouns, for example Germany → German, Orwell → Orwellian, Machiavelli → Machiavellian.

London is an English town.

Who is the Canadian prime minister?

Which is your favourite Shakespearian play?

16. Use the indefinite article a/an for countable nouns in general. Use the definite article the for specific countable nouns and all uncountable nouns.

I saw a bird and a balloon in the sky. The bird was blue and the balloon was yellow.

He always saves some of the money that he earns.

17. Use the indefinite article a with words beginning with a consonant sound. Use the indefinite article an with words beginning with a vowel sound. see When to Say a or an

a cat, a game of golf, a human endeavour, a Frenchman, a university (you-ni-ver-si-ty)

an apple, an easy job, an interesting story, an old man, an umbella, an honorable man

18. Use many or few with countable nouns. Use much/a lot or little for uncountable nouns. see Quantifiers

How many dollars do you have?

How much money do you have?

There are a few cars outside.

There is little traffic on the roads.

19. To show possession (who is the owner of something) use an apostrophe + s for singular owners, and s + apostrophe for plural owners.

The boy's dog. (one boy)

The boys' dog. (two or more boys)

20. In general, use the active voice (Cats eat fish) in preference to the passive voice (Fish are eaten by cats).

We use active in preference to passive.

Active is used in preference to passive." - Google

3 0
3 years ago
What is the central idea of this passage?
Flura [38]

Answer:

I think the answer is " Violence in films can be controlled by our collective refusal to watch"

Explanation:

8 0
4 years ago
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