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Ivahew [28]
3 years ago
13

Read the narrative and determine the point of view:

English
2 answers:
Ulleksa [173]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

E. Third person omniscient

Explanation:

Flauer [41]3 years ago
3 0
I think it’s E but I’m not really sure
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What is the author trying to say about our present age?​
Svetach [21]
Which author and which book? i might be able to answer
7 0
3 years ago
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What is the "only good thing" Pip has done since he found out about his great expectations? He apologized to Joe for how he trea
Gnoma [55]

Answer:

The only good thing he did was to come up with a secret plan for his friend, Herbert, to get a job.

Explanation:

"Great Expectations" is a book written by Charles Dickens and tells the story of Pip, an apprentice blacksmith, orphan and poor boy who is constantly mistreated by his sister. One day, Pip receives a mysterious inheritance, which makes him very rich. He is full of high expectations of what the money will provide him, however, during this new life, he is very selfish and resentful. However, Pip recognizes his mistakes and tries to become a better person as he becomes wiser. When he reflects on everything he has done, he recognizes that the only good thing he has done is to help Herbert find a job. Pip made a plan for Herbert to be hired, unaware of Pip's help, thinking he had gotten a job with his own merits.

3 0
3 years ago
What is your interpretation of "The Story of My Experiments with Truth"?
Novay_Z [31]

D. In The Story of My Experiments With Truth, Gandhi supports his argument by referencing general examples.

For Example,

According to this philosophy, satyagrahis—practitioners of satyagraha—achieve correct insight into the real nature of an evil situation by observing a nonviolence of the mind, by seeking truth in a spirit of peace and love, and by undergoing a rigorous process of self-scrutiny. In so doing, the satyagrahi encounters truth in the absolute. By refusing to submit to the wrong or to cooperate with it in any way, the satyagrahi asserts that truth. Throughout the confrontation with evil, the satyagrahi must adhere to nonviolence, for to employ violence would be to lose correct insight. Satyagrahis always warn their opponents of their intentions; satyagraha forbids any tactic suggesting the use of secrecy to one’s advantage. Satyagraha includes more than civil disobedience. Its full range of application extends from the details of correct daily living to the construction of alternative political and economic institutions. Satyagraha seeks to conquer through conversion: in the end, there is neither defeat nor victory but rather a new harmony.

Satyagraha draws from the ancient Indian ideal of ahimsa (“noninjury”), which is pursued with particular rigour by Jains, many of whom live in Gujarat, where Gandhi grew up. In developing ahimsa into a modern concept with broad political consequences, as satyagraha, Gandhi also drew from the writings of Leo Tolstoy and Henry David Thoreau, from the Bible, and from the Bhagavadgita, on which he wrote a commentary. Gandhi first conceived satyagraha in 1906 in response to a law discriminating against Asians that was passed by the British colonial government of the Transvaal in South Africa. In 1917 the first satyagraha campaign in India was mounted in the indigo-growing district of Champaran. During the following years, fasting and economic boycotts were employed as methods of satyagraha in India, until the British left the country in 1947.

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See All Good Facts

Critics of satyagraha, both in Gandhi’s time and subsequently, have argued that it is unrealistic and incapable of universal success, since it relies upon a high standard of ethical conduct in the opponent, the representative of evil, and demands an unrealistically strong level of commitment from those struggling for social amelioration. Nonetheless, satyagraha played a significant role in the civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King, Jr., in the United States and has spawned a continuing legacy in South Asia itself.

Learn more about the summary of "The Story of My experiments with Truth" in https://brainly.in/question/22230217

#SPJ10

8 0
2 years ago
How does Hamilton use rhetoric in Paragraph 3 when addressing the importance of an independent judiciary???He presents the judic
kumpel [21]

Answer:

D) He uses an appeal to reason and logic, arguing that, since the judiciary's job is to make sure that laws follow the rules set out by the Constitution, the courts cannot be influenced by the branches that pass or enforce those laws.

Explanation:

I took the test.

6 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Read this quote and then write about what you think it means.
jekas [21]

Answer:

Below

Explanation:

Henry means that his liberty equals his life. His life has no sense without liberty. He prefers dying rather than living as a slave or with no liberty, he prefers dying that being owned.

6 0
3 years ago
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