The reading of Whitman affected the narrator mostly through the realization that It makes her realize how open she can be when expressing herself in America.
Option B
Explanation:
The Whitman reading made the narrator most affected as the narrator then realizes that she can be freed and has the freedom to expression and so she knew about how open minded or extrovert she can become while expressing herself in America.
She realizes that she can say with all her openness and freedom to what ever she is willing to say. She becomes confident and be able to write the speeches herself, unlike her mother did.
I would say C. I may have agreed yesterday; however, now I`m not so sure.
Answer:
I could not find online the text to which you are referring, but I can get an idea of what it refers to.
If we talk about love, and even more about a marriage that takes place for love, we are talking about something we do of our own free will, without seeking anything in return. It is a union that two people make with the confidence that it will last forever because they love each other, and their only interest is that promise of union that exists between one and the other.
On the other hand, an arranged marriage is usually carried out to obtain something in return and is devoid of love.
There are many religions that parents arrange marriages for their children without giving them a choice. There are other cases where maybe two people decide to get married to get some benefit, even if they are not in love.
Basically, those are the biggest differences between the two concepts.
A.
"tired from the long day" is an addition to the full sentence "My cousin James fell asleep on the couch." Since it's in the middle of the sentence, it makes more sense to the reader when each part is separated to indicate the transition of thought.
(There is more technical reasons for this, but thinking about it in terms of transitioning thoughts always made more sense to me personally.)
<span>A
pronoun is a word, which we use instead of a noun, usually to avoid
boring repetitions. For example, in the following sentence, I am going
to swap the word "pronouns" for the word "them", simply because you will
get bored if I fill each sentence with the word "pronoun". There are
various forms of them.
Subject pronouns: I, You, He, She, It, We, You, They
Object pronouns: Me, You, Him, Her, It, Us, You, Them
Possessive pronouns: Mine, Yours, His, Hers, Its, Ours, Yours, Theirs
Relative pronouns: Which, whose, that, where, when....etc...
I could go on, but I reckon you get the idea now. Ironically, the word "pronoun" is actually a noun.
So the answer yes
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