Answer:
Option a
Explanation:
Dr. King echoes a Biblical allusion from Psalms 30:5—“weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning”--when he says, "it came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity,” meaning how like joyous daybreak was the moment when the dark night of slavery was over. (King).
Noun(person place or thing) - new york
Adjective(describing word) - delicious
The answer is gained because monuments can not force you to do something, but people can look at the monument
They are opposing ideas, so yes. A dream is NOT reality and vice versa. Yes the phrase is an oxymoron.
:)
B.<span>The author wants to carry the theme of perseverance beyond the scope of the narrative by illustrating it to readers in a separate setting.
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