Its called an Aristocracy Government
It says in the text that millions or people had come from different parts of the country to go into Washington, D.C. to protest. So congregate means to gather around in a mass.
So the context clues would be “meet on the National Mall” “millions of people” “their voices heard”.
hope this helps
The answers would be:
- character who tells or narrator the story: Pierre Aronnax
- frigate sent out to catch the monster: Abraham Lincoln
- voyage began: New York
- destination of the Abraham Lincoln: Pacific Ocean
- ship which had its hull pierced by the monster: Scotia
Twenty thousand leagues under the sea is a science fiction novel by Jules Verne. The character who narrates the story is Aronnax, a French Marine biologist, who boards the frigate Abraham Lincoln in an expedition to hunt a monster spotted by several ships of different nations. The monster turns out to be a submarine commanded by Captain Nemo who, upon being discovered by Aronnax and the others, has no intention of allowing them to go home.
Answer:
The novel Kindred features a black women Dana in the 1970 who is pulled back into the antebellum South to learn about her family origins. She is considered as a slave, however she is married to a white American in the modern life.
Explanation:
Octavia Butler's Kindred features a protagonist, Dana, who is a African woman in the 1970s in California. Dana gets mysteriously, and without much warning, pulled back into the antebellum South to learn about her family origins.
As she is transported to the South, Dana is assumed to be a slave. She must learn to adjust to life on the plantation despite always having been free in her "real life" in the 1970s. During this time, she of course learns about racism and comes face-to-face with the brutal treatment of her ancestors, including a foremother named Alice. Over the course of the novel, Dana learns that the plantation master, Rufus, a boy she once saved as a child in one of her trips to the past, is also her ancestor.
Meanwhile, in modern-day America, Dana is married to a white man named Kevin. Their relationship is based on love, respect, and mutual interests. While they have freely chosen to be together, Dana's trips to the past complicate the way she views her relationship with Kevin. When Kevin eventually travels with her to the plantation, their vast differences in the antebellum South are thrown into stark relief: Kevin is assumed to be a powerful master. In their modern-day lives, Kevin and Dana see themselves as equals.
To illustrate the idea that gratitude is important