Answer:
It is the third one . I hope this helped.
Explanation:
Need more inform
ation to answer this questions
Well the answer b and c are both right but I would pick b
Answer:
Explanation:
I didn't hear any reference to Bad Checks. If there was reference to it, it was not a major point. Not A
B: not emphasized either. The Amendments to the constitution contain rights given to the colored. Not B.
C: When he speaks of freedom reigning in America of his dream, King is inferring that there is still too much inequality in the United States, no matter what the constitution might guarantee.
C is your answer.
D is a minor consideration of what freedom means. The right to travel is not nearly as important as skin color no longer mattering.
The question above is incomplete, the complete version is given below:
Read this excerpt from
"Not a Dove, But No Longer a Hawk."
I wonder, when I look at the
bombed out peasant hamlets, the orphans begging and stealing on the streets of
Saigon and the women and children with napalm burns lying on the hospital cots,
whether the United States or any nation has the right to inflict this suffering
and degradation on another people for its own ends.<span>
How do the allusions in this excerpt reinforce the meaning of the passage?</span>
The allusions clarify the geographic locations visited by the
author.
The allusions recall specific locations and horrors of the
Vietnam conflict.
The allusions question the Vietnamese for allowing such a
violent war.
<span>The allusions criticize the political philosophies that
encourage suffering.</span>
<span>ANSWER</span>
The correct option is this: THE ALLUSION CRITICIZE THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHIES THAT ENCOURAGE SUFFERING. Allusion is a figure of speech, which refers to an object or a circumstance from an external context. In the passage given above, the author is questioning the political morality behind war. War usually result in great suffering for all involved and the author is wondering, if is morally correct for countries to be settling their differences by mean of warfare.