English
English, 04.09.2019 07:20, alyea231

What does the speaker mean when he compares humans to trees?
a) the speaker claims that it is better to remain rooted in one place to truly bloom.
b) the speaker suggests that humans, like trees, must give freely to thrive.
c) the speaker expresses the idea that both trees and humans are unable to give to every deserving creature.
d) the speaker makes the comparison to show that humans should give only to those who are deserving.
eliminate

answer
Answers: 2

Other questions on the subject: English

image
English, 21.06.2019 23:30, delayne22
Select the correct answer. read this excerpt from incidents in the life of a slave girl by harriet ann jacobs: among the ladies who were acquainted with my grandmother, was one who had known her from childhood, and always been very friendly to her. she had also known my mother and her children, and felt interested for them. at this crisis of affairs she called to see my grandmother, as she not unfrequently did. she observed the sad and troubled expression of her face, and asked if she knew where linda was, and whether she was safe. my grandmother shook her head, without answering. "come, aunt martha," said the kind lady, "tell me all about it. perhaps i can do something to you." which of these important concepts uncommon to abolitionist literature does jacobs depict in the excerpt? 1. some kind white characters were included in slave narratives so that northerners would not be offended. 2. southern society was complex and diverse with both good and bad people unlike northern stereotypes showed. 3. many kind slave owners and their slaves developed deep friendships. 4. most whites and blacks lived in harmony in the south and made efforts to each other. a. 1 and 4 b. 1 and 3 c. 1 and 2 d. 2 and 3
Answers: 3
image
English, 22.06.2019 01:30, ciarakelly636owuiup
Read the passage. and thus they fought all the long day, and never stinted till the noble knights were laid to the cold earth. and ever they fought still till it was near night, and by then was there a hundred thousand laid dead upon the down. in the passage from morte d’arthur by sir thomas malory, what are the bolded words an example of?
Answers: 1
image
English, 22.06.2019 02:30, toxsicity
Which component of a rhetorical argument is missing from the chart above? a. civics (civos) b. ethics (ethos) c. patriotics (patros) d. histrionics (histros)
Answers: 3
image
English, 22.06.2019 02:30, animeisstupid6
The harlem renaissance dawned in an era of pervasive racism and segregation. although legally "free," many african americans were still bound by ideas that had their roots in the slavery of earlier centuries. identity and freedom are important ideas presented in many of the poems from the harlem renaissance. furthermore, the values of identity and freedom are not unique to particular times and places. as hughes expresses in "dream variations," all humans want to be able to develop their identities in freedom. what role does freedom play in the poems you read in this unit? what is required of a society to enable each individual to be true to his or her identity and be free to live by that identity? write about at least three of the poems, describing how the poet uses imagery to depict freedom and identity, the lack of it, or the desire for it.
Answers: 3
Do you know the correct answer?
What does the speaker mean when he compares humans to trees?
a) the speaker claims that it is...

Questions in other subjects: