Answer: here's my answer
Explanation: During the spring of 1813, former presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson were united in grief at the death of a mutual friend who had recently persuaded them to forget their bitter rivalries. Like the two celebrated statesmen, the eminent physician and social reformer Benjamin Rush had been a Founding Father, one of 56 men who signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776.
But Adams and Jefferson believed that Rush deserved to be remembered for much more than his conspicuous enthusiasm for the cause of American liberty. Jefferson wrote that “a better man, than Rush, could not have left us,” extolling his benevolence, learning, genius and honesty. Adams replied with equal praise: He knew of no one, “living or dead,” who had “done more real good in America.” Writing to Rush’s son, Richard, Adams maintained that as a “benefactor” to his country, the doctor deserved greater recognition than even the celebrated polymath Benjamin Franklin.
Repeating (or repetition) is not a component of active listening. It can be a mechanical process, devoid of understanding. Many people repeat some phrases just to show that they are listening, when in fact they are not. All the other components presume that the listener has received the message and processed it.
"On kin of cain" through to "that woful breed" Cain was the child of Adam and Eve, who killed his brother.
<span>A postmodernist work is more likely to have B. a more playful attitude than a modernist work. This is because most of the modernist works revolved around the WWI, which was a dark and tragic time, and postmodernism started after the wars, so those were not a dominant topic of their literature. Thus, the authors could experiment more with the genre, be more playful, all the while still talking about serious topics, usually in a cynical and surreal way.</span>