Every paragraph has to have an antecedent and an anecdote to go with it to keep the topic of the paragraph where it's supposed to be. So it doesn't turn into a run on paragraph <span />
Unclear question, but I infer you are referring to a passage that isn't mentioned.
Answer:
e. Personification
Explanation:
Based on the context which referred to abstract objects; time and care, the author seems to be personifying 'Time'.
Note that Personification is a type of figure of speech that attributes or refers to something that is not a person as though it were.
One common example is "Have you seen my car? Isn't she beautiful?". We noticed the car is spoken as though it were a person.
It creates an organized structure that allows Kennedy to counter the opinions of others.
<u><em>The correct answer is the following: the belief that dreams often remain unrealized due to oppression.
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<u><em> Actually in the fourth four line unit the note of skepticism is difficult to understand infact he talks about his world dream where misery doesn’t exist in men’s lives because it has replaced by the Joy. Finally Hughes comments that a world like this can only exist in his dream vision.
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<u><em>In “I Dream a World” the character is the dreamer and visionary in the scheme of things but also the reader is engaged in this dreaming process, we can say that both dream the same dream. The implicit function of every four line unit is to explain the reality that the vision of Hughes’s dream try to resolve. Hughes’ contrasting versions of the world or as he imagines are presented in each unit too.
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D) It was his usual custom to wash his hands before each meal.
When one is redundant, one basically says the same thing twice or says something that is unnecessary. For instance, it would be redundant to say “wet water” because water, by its nature is wet. Thus, when we look at Option D, the redundancy it contains is “usual custom.” This is redundant because an act that is customary, or is a custom, is so because of its usual practice.