Answer:
Given that none of the four voices can be attributed to Cavendish herself, the obvious inference is that Cavendish held views and possessed abilities that enabled her to eloquently express all of these divergent views. She was aware of widely ranging positions, and she was herself an educated woman. Therefore, it is hard to believe that she would hold the views of Speaker III, for example, who disparages women. Most clearly, perhaps, the orations show that Cavendish values wide, open discourse. In that sense she seems to agree with Speaker I. The act of putting these orations together, in itself, implies that Cavendish must have believed in the value of female perceptions and of women taking active intellectual roles. The fact that all the orations are so skillfully presented is a clear and convincing demonstration that such values are valid.
Answer:
Malcolm X predicts that people in America would be "astounded" by his letter on page 346 because most of them had already developed a "hate" image about him.
Explanation:
All most Americans knew about Malcolm X was his rejection of the white race and aggressive fight for equality. After his visit to Mecca, he came back to America with a different view on race, a positive one, that people hadn't expected because they had already formed an image of him that was different from this one.
i would say its a, conceited! good luck :)
It is a preposition.
hope it helped
If the story is being presented, this will make the question easy to answer.