The Little Red Tortoise follows a number of themes. The three main or central themes are as follows: the importance of being careful around strangers, the importance of paying attention to one's parents, and the need for a person to rely upon their own instincts.
Answer:
To share experiences
Explanation:
In modern times, people usually write travel books and essays to share their experiences.
Assuming this is in regard to "I Hear America Singing" by Walt Whitman, and "I, Too", by Langston Hughes.
The main point that Hughes makes in "I too (Sing, America)" is that the experience of many marginalized groups are not acknowledged in the national narrative. He directs this at Whitman's poem, pointing the many groups he does not mention singing. Hughes makes the point that American needs to celebrate all its people, and not just the ones who had a voice at the time.
Best answer is D) <span>America needs to celebrate its people.
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Answer: D) "They indicate a channel," he said, "where there's none: giant rocks with razor edges crouch like a sea monster with wide-open jaws. They can crush a ship . . ."
Explanation: In this part of "The Most Dangerous Game" General Zaroff explains to Rainsford that he hunts humans in his island, and when Rainsford asks why men keep going to the island, the general lights a signal that indicates a channel where there is none, so when the ships were destroyed by the rocks, the sailors are forced to swim to the general's island, where they are hunted, this support the claim that The general does not play fair in his game.