The theme is that ethnocentric hurdles are a problem Americans faced not only in the past, but still face today. Clifton and Dondre are not allowed to participate in major events with their peers due to the ethnocentric hurdles placed in front of them. For Clifton, this was not being allowed to go to an amusement park on his school trip. For Dondre, this was not being allowed to play in a golf tournament at a golf club that did not allow African Americans. Dondre and Clifton bonded over their shared experiences, and they and their classmates and teammates will be eternally bonded in their efforts to overcome the struggle of inequities that still rear up as the hideous face of hatred and discrimination.
The type of figurative language that is used in the sentence from George Orwell's novel Keep the Aspidistra Flying is a metaphor. A metaphor is a figure of speech that compares two different things in an implied way. In this line, the public is compared to a swine and advertising is compared to the rattling of a stick inside a swill-bucket.
Answer:
To the man under the covenant.
Explanation:
Answer: A. In Hamlet there are two women. Gertrude and Ophelia. Throughout the play they are refereed to by the name "women" and are treated as if they are weak and frail. Depicting that through Hamlet there is often little to no respect for them.
B. Hamlet does experience true melancholy. He begins to experience both melancholy and madness because he is having trouble avenging his fathers death by killing the murderer.
C. Hamlet at first did feign his madness but he soon gave into it. He gave into the madness after thinking that the ghost was a trick being played on him by the devil.
Hamlet began to have "madness" as an affect from the melancholy.
Explanation:
He does it beacuse he fears a hurricane. The excerpt that supports this part is:
Then up and spake an old Sailòr, Had sailed to the Spanish Main,
"I pray thee, put into yonder port,
For I fear a hurricane.