Can you provide the passages? I can help you compare! It's quite easy to compare, make sure you summarize both and say how they are the same. Make sure to also talk about how they are different.
In Langston Hughes' "I, Too", he speaks of how segregation existed in his present times and how he had to show tolerance towards those who shun him, but how that would not always be the case. His metaphor begins when he states that people "... send me to eat in the kitchen." while everyone else eats at the table. So he's set aside and left behind by society while everyone else carries a normal life. However, he doesn't fall for self pity but "laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.", waiting for the day when he will <em>sit at the table</em> and no one will dare to send him away as they will be able to see his value.
This is an extended metaphor as it is not confined to a phrase or sentence, but rather used throughout the whole text.
Answer:
In wars, secret codes are used to hide information from the enemy.
Explanation:
Honestly, a hook sentence just can be a random fact, question, or whatever that is related to your claim/thesis.
For example, a question could be, "Have you ever created a secret code with someone?"
A fact could be, "About 420 people were Navajo code talkers in World War II."
Just put something interesting and it works!
Answer:
The White Man's Burden was written by Rudyard Kipling in 1899. In Th White Man's Burden Rudyard Kipling helped set American colonies and become the leader of the Philippine Islands, Caribbean Sea, and the Pacific Ocean. There was a war for 3 months in the long Spanish American war. In 1901, Mark Twain's book helped defend The White Man's Burden. Looking back at 1899, it was Rudyard Kiplings pride to his religion that declined poetics that showed an anti-imperialist emotion. He addressed the white-supremacy and racism like: The Brown Man's Burden, which was a comment to Rudyards Kipling February 1899, by a politician from Britain, by H. T. Johnson and the poem Take Up the Black Man's Burden, by a teacher in America named Dallas Bowser.