Answer:
Implied definition
Explanation:
It means the context is giving you different clues or hints in order to understand the meaning, but it is not actually stated.
For instance, let's say you are talking to your friend, but he is not really looking at you in the eye, he is constantly yawning and he is also checking his watch. What is the implied meaning here? He is bored. However, he does not say anything, you just imply it out of his behavior.
Answer:
The speaker's dream for America different than the reality he describes below in complete details.
Explanation:
The poem discourses the American dream that never endured for the cheap-class American and the sovereignty and justice that every foreigner wished for but never endured. In his poem, Hughes expresses not only African Americans but other economically weaker sections and minority organizations as well.
Answer:
B. One leopard can catch an animal
Explanation:
Hope I could help!
Basically its saying photography has become a bit too focused on the past - even if it’s the immediate past. Just take all that talk about, let’s say, how colour photography became an accepted part of art photography (you could also pick the New Topographics<span> or whatever else). And then re-read the quotes…
or saying </span> <span>Fitting in is a necessary, but not sufficient criterion.
Being new is not sufficient.
Popularity right now is not enough.
Someone liking the poem now is not enough.
Does a poem conform to the new times?
Is a poem individual and different?
These are coexisting requirements for a poem to be valuable.
>is a work of art that conforms completely really a work of art?
"Conforming", in the sense of forming the leadership for a new age.
Yes, conforming is a necessary, but not sufficient requirement for a poem:
"its fitting in is a test of its value–a test,"
>should contemporary works of art be judged as “better” or “worse” than past ones?
There is no way that new poems be as bad as old poems, or their canons.
"certainly not judged by the canons of dead critics."</span>