Answer:
1. The word 'tend' means 'disposed to', or 'frequently leads to' destruction.
2. He chose this subtitle for this section to explain how difficult it was for the French people to control the Vietnamese people.
3. Ruined means destruction.
4. The Vietnamese people were doing the ruining.
Explanation:
The article, "The Vietnam Wars," highlights the resistance put up by the Vietnamese people when other nations like the Chinese and French tried to subjugate them. In that section, the phrase, "Everything Tends to Ruin", was used by a French Military commander to summarize the frustration of the French people who tried to colonize the Vietnamese people.
The locals used their knowledge of the terrains to cause mayhem to their colonists. They resisted the schooling offered by the French people and rather embraced their culture. All ploys by the French colonists to subjugate them were met with resistance.
The answer would a , add period
Answer:
B) Billions of pounds of plastic trash litter the world’s oceans and beaches.
Answer:
The poem "Harlem" uses the free verse form of poetry.
Explanation:
Langston Hughes' poem "Harlem" was written in the form of a free verse which means that there is no specific rhyme scheme or meter form. Free verse poems are nonetheless poetic. The absence of any consistent rhyme scheme did not defer in the poem's meaningful expression of the poem.
Hughes'<em> "Harlem"</em> is in the form of a question which the poet directed to the readers. The poem goes like this-
<em>What happens to a dream deferred?
</em>
<em> Does it dry up
</em>
<em> like a raisin in the sun?
</em>
<em> Or fester like a sore—
</em>
<em> And then run?
</em>
<em> Does it stink like rotten meat?
</em>
<em> Or crust and sugar over—
</em>
<em> like a syrupy sweet?
</em>
<em />
<em> Maybe it just sags
</em>
<em> like a heavy load.
</em>
<em>
</em>
<em> Or does it explode?</em>
There are no specific rhyming scheme though some words do rhyme in some lines (sun/run, meat/sweet etc). But overall, there is no indication of any sense of rhyming or meter form.
The answer is D. Neither is misspelled as niether with an ie when it is supposed to be an ei.
Hope this helps!
~Courtney