Answer:
Explanation: Paul-Edward is the son of a white farmer whose first name is Edward and a Black Native American mother. Paul's father had a white wife and had children with her, and refused to let Paul-Edward have his name Edward, as his mother wanted, because he hadn't allowed any of his white children to have his name, thus he was called Paul-Edward. Because he was multi-racial, Paul-Edward faced racism, ridicule, discrimination, and cruelty as he grew up.
Answer: no matter what is done to the speaker and to her people, her power is such that "still, like dust, I'll rise." This simile suggests that the speaker is lighter than air, floating upward, above the "lies" of her oppressors. The poem is replete with similes. The speaker compares herself to "moons" and "suns" and describes herself as having "the certainty of tides," all images which suggest constancy and a capacity to stay the course and outlast naysayers. The speaker also uses figurative language to suggest that she behaves as if she is wealthier than she is, knowing that there is an internal, natural wealth inside her. She behaves "like I've got gold mines" and "like I've got oil wells," indicating that the speaker carries herself with the confidence of someone who has valuable natural resources, and knows it.
Explanation:
Cantebury, macadory
starshine, beeline
exhuberant, how Jubilant!
funny, Johnny, how cunning.
Loftful and thoughtful.
Make me never awful.
Happytime, sunshine
run wild, be a child!
~theLocoCoco
This is a careless construction, which is grammatically correct and is not an idiom or a jargon.
The correct option is "Volunteering is a good way to make friends, help the community, and feel good."
Parallelism is achieved when the same grammar pattern is used when listing ideas. In this example, the parallel structures are "make friends, help the community and feel good" since they all use the same grammar structure: verb+object.
In the rest of the options, there is a break in the pattern so no parallelism is achived.