I remember doing something like this in my English/U.S. History class, so we are in the same shoes. ¯\_✿ ³✿_/¯
Washington has a entwined history with the sport of baseball. From President William Taft to President Barack Obama, every president since William Taft - exept Jimmy Carter - has thrown at least one ceremonial pitch while in office. A lot of presidents have had a history in the sport of baseball. And some of them could have made a career out of it.
President Warren Harding, for example, owned a baseball team in Ohio. Dwight Eisenhower used to play on a junior baseball team at West Point. Even so, Washington did not have a baseball team for almost 3 decades, from 1971, till when the Nationals came in 2005. George W. Bush was the first president to throw a pitch in the new Nationals' new ballpark. The opening pitch of a baseball is truly a POTUS tradition, and always will be - I hope. -
Answer:
simile
Explanation:
this isnt using like or as which is a metaphor, so its a simile
Answer:
The businessman said I should get out of his office
In this central claim made by the narrator in this passage.
seamen are mostly uninterested in land related matters but Marlow had a wide range of interests
Marlow a seamen, was out of job for a certain period. He needed a ship but got nothing. He got appointed quite smoothly owing two things : his aunt's relations in the higher administration and the murder one of the ship's captain in Congo. Marlow calls the land of the Congo " prehistoric" and he considered himself among the first of man taking possession of an accursed inheritance.
Marlow exposes the bitterness of American life .
the anger of unstirred of the white men that killed them without any resort. The black peoples escaping the invading whites and in doing so, they were being slaughtered either by hunger or they were being caught by the "civilized" white man that yoked them for drudgery. The natives are also enemies of each other. tribal system is also there and utterly divided Africa which lured was engulfed in darkness and invited a rather graver darkness of greed and lust from outside its heart