Answer:
The 'invisible crime' that was prevalent in the 1950s when Miller wrote The Crucible was 'communist hunt' also known as 'McCarthyism'.
Explanation:
In his essay titled 'Why I Wrote "The Crucible"', Miller hints about this 'invisible crime' that was prevalent in America in the 1950s. When Arthur Miller wrote the play "The Crucible" about the witch-hunt in American colony Salem, Massachusetts in 1692-93, at the present-moment America was dealing with McCarthyism.
McCarthyism, Communist-hunting, was similar to the incidents of witch-trials in 1692-93. After Soviet's first nuclear weapon test in 1949, the US government feared communist incursion.
Therefore, the correct answer is McCarthyism.
Why is Fortunato's name ironic?
O He is very rich.
O He is arrogant.
O He is not very fortunate.
Answer:
he is not very fortunate
According to Thoreau, what happens to those individuals who “serve the state with their consciences”?why?
Answer:
Thoreau believes the majority of men serve the state physically, or “as machines, with their bodies.” These individuals make up the military and police forces, and because they are unable to make judgments or moral decisions--only follow orders--Thoreau does not think very highly of these individuals. In fact, though others admire the men in these positions, Thoreau see them as beasts of burden or pets of the state.
“They have the same sort of worth only as horses and dogs.” (ouch!)
A smaller set serve legislatively, and in this Thoreau includes pastors. These individuals are on a higher level than the previous group because they are able to make moral judgments and to act on it.
The final set, and the one that Thoreau admires, are those that serve ideologically : “heroes, patriots, martyrs, reformers…” These individuals are often seen as the enemies of the state for using their consciences to resist any injustice they see. They are not appreciated for their efforts by others,...
What is the vague word or phrase in the thesis statement below.
Summer vacation should be shortened as it causes you it forget many academic concepts
Answer:
Not 100% sure but...
Explanation:
"Forget many academic concepts" is quite vague as you have not explained what academic concepts, what you forget (and to what extent) as well as (why?). "Shortened" could also be quite vague as you have not stated what you would like it to be shortened to in comparison of what is usually is (unless you wished to explain that afterwards) .
SOMEONE PUT THIS IN OTHER WORDS PLS, WILL MARK BRAINLIEST. THANKS
if i was going to express my opinion about this topic it would would mostly about how the US has been treating black people all this years it was not only george floyd who was gun shot they have been mistreating black people and had blamed them for the things they haven't done just because they are black it doesn't mean they are different or they don't deserve to have the humans equality and right the black people should be respected and have all the rights that other people have. my contention would be that keep protesting the safe way because violence is not going to do anything then making worst if we protest with violence and they will make reports saying that they are protesting just because they want to steal and destroy things.
Answer:
The United States of America have been treating African Americans systemically worse than the general population for years before people woke up after the shooting of George Floyd. It has been shown in many of the states largest cities, black communities were policied differently, not treated with the same financial funding for education and other social programs that white communties recieved. With the recent events of George Floyd and countless other victims of police brutality, protests should remain peaceful, respectful and organized. These type of silent protests lead to more respect from both sides whether you agree or not and doesn't distance others who are on the fence of the issue at hand, systemic racism in the United States.
Explanation:
what 2 words would you use to describe the story "Where is Here"
Answer:
Abuse, Masculinity
Explanation:
PLS HELP MEH ! Are a characters feelings the same as the tone of a story? Explain why or why not, and give an example.
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
The letters are uppercase which implies that the character is screaming. The punctuation at the end is an exclamation point which emphasizes the statement.
what is falling action?
Answer:
Events leading to the end of the story
Explanation:
Falling Actions
2 Free Market Economy Summary: Imagine you are a business owner. You have a set of goods you sell, make, or produce in some way. Your store can be whatever you like including one that sells goods, one that sells services, or a corporation of some sort. Using what you have learned about the free market economy and reflecting upon the work from earlier this week, summarize how your business would function under each form of economic system. Give examples of what it would look like. Be creative in your narrative as this is supposed to be a fun and creative writing using what you have learned. Traditional: I Free Market: Command: Mixed:
Explanation:
Note, a free-market economy is an economy that little government control over the supply and demand of most goods and services.
Since we operate under a free market economy, we would have or expect to have competitors who sell similar goods and services as we do. We would expect the prices of goods and services to change based on supply/demand factors. And lastly, as a corporation of some sort, we are going to enjoy the freedom to expand our operations without government restrictions.
Select the correct answer from each drop-down menu.
An individual drama, such as a Greek drama, consists of several parts. The are the people whose words and actions are represented by actors. The set of lines spoken in the play are called . All the written text
of the play is contained within the .
Characters are those people who are played by actors on stage
Dialogue refers to the speech spoken by two or more people
Screenplay (or script)
In the story Paul Bunyan and his Great Blue Ox, Paul ls a lumberjack with superhuman strength who can perform extraordinary feats. He has a pet, a blue ox named Babe, that ls so large, he Is as big as a mountain. Based on this description, how would you categorize this story
legend
tall tale
fable
myth
Answer:
legend
Explanation:
Type your response in the box. Reread the poem "Winter-Time C" by Robert Louis Stevenson. Then copy and paste the last two stanzas into the answer field and scan them. Identify the stressed and unstressed syllables as well as the meter. When you scan the stanzas, remember to highlight or bold the stressed syllables and place foot markers in the appropriate spots. Lord's the first stanza of the room ac an cyarople.
Answer:
When to | go out, | my nurse | doth wrap
Me in | my com | -forter | and cap;
The cold | wind burns | my face, | and blows
Its frost | -y pep | -per up | my nose.
Black are | my steps | on sil |-ver sod;
Thick blows | my frost |-y breath | abroad;
And tree | and house, | and hill | and lake,
Are frost |-ed like | a wed | -ding-cake.
Have a nice day! Most importantly, don't let your teacher find out.
Answer:Black are | my steps | on sil |-ver sod;
Thick blows | my frost |-y breath | abroad;
And tree | and house, | and hill | and lake,
Are frost |-ed like | a wed | -ding-cake.
Explanation:
We were wanderers on a prehistoric earth, on an earth that wore the aspect of an unknown planet. We could have fancied ourselves the first of men taking possession of an accursed inheritance, to be subdued at the cost of profound anguish and of excessive toil.
–Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad
According to the narrator, what would be the negative outcomes of "taking possession" of the land?
A: "wanderers on a prehistoric earth"
B: "the aspect of an unknown planet"
C: "an accursed inheritance"
D: "profound anguish and . . . excessive toil"
Answer:
D) “profound anguish and . . . excessive toil”
Explanation:
It’s correct on egu2020
According to the narrator "profound anguish and . . . excessive toil" would be the negative outcomes of "taking possession" of the land.
What is land ?
The solid terrestrial portion of planet Earth that is not covered by an ocean or other body of water is referred to as land, sometimes known as dry land, ground, or earth. The continents and other islands make up the 29 percent of the Earth's surface that is covered by land.
Attorney in Charge at Desautel Law. Planning for land use is essential for the wise management or growth of the environment around us. Residential, agricultural, recreational, transit, and commercial are the five basic categories of land use.
The phrase "land usage" is used to describe how people use land. It symbolizes the economic and cultural activities that are carried out in a certain location, including those that are agricultural, residential, industrial, mining, and recreational in nature. Land usage on public and private properties typically diverge greatly.
Thus, option D is correct.
To learn more about land follow the link ;
https://brainly.com/question/27588497
#SPJ5
Selections must be from Unit 1: William Bradford (U1L2), Anne Bradstreet (U1L4), Phillis Wheatley (U1L4), Jonathan Edwards (U1L5), Olaudah Equiano (U1L6), Thomas Paine (U1L7), and Thomas Jefferson (U1L8).
12a. Identify two early American/colonial authors from the list above along with a text/excerpt they wrote. Possible Selections:
Author choice 1 and selection:
Author choice 2 and selection:
12b. What is similar and/or different about each author’s purpose in your two selections above? (Is it to inform, explain, persuade, create, express, reflect, etc.?)
12c. What is similar and/or different about each author’s audience in the two selections above? (Think about who the author is writing to.)
12d. What is similar and/or different about each author’s style in the two selections above? (Think about themes, word choice, tone, form, etc.)
Answer:
William Bradford.
Anne Bradstreet.
Explanation:
Excerpt written by Willian Bradford, in the poem "A word to New England":
"Oh New England, you can not boast;
Thy former glory thou hast lost.
When H00ker, Winthrop, Cotton died,
And many precious ones beside,
Thy beauty then it did decay,
And still doth languish more away. "
William Bradford was one of the first American writers, being one of the most important in the literary production and in the general history of the country. He was a Puritan, served as governor of the Plymouth colony and is the author of the most important account of English colonists and the difficulties they faced on the new continent.
Excerpt written by Anne Bradstreet, in the poem "Upon a Fit of Sickness":
"Bubble blast, how long can'st last?
That always art a breaking,
No sooner blown, but dead and gone,
Ev'n as a word that's speaking.
The whil'st I live, this grace me give,
I doing good may be,
Then death's arrest I shall count best,
because it's thy decree. "
Anne Bradstreet is recognized as the first poet within the territory where the USA is today. She never went to school, but she learned to read and write with her father who was instrumental in her education and one of the main responsible for her ability. She was also a Puritan, but she was not well regarded by other Puritans for displaying behavior considered wrong for that society, such as a woman writing and showing love for her husband.
give 5 example of passive voice
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
please help
Answer:
1. At dinner, six shrimp were eaten by Harry.
2. The savannah is roamed by beautiful giraffes.
3. A movie is going to be watched by us tonight.
4. The obstacle course was run by me in record time.
5. The entire stretch of highway was paved by the crew.
Explanation:
How many times did your uncle who writes children's fiction......that prize? a) award b) was awarded c) win d) was rewarded
Answer:
its win because the other ones dont make sense
I WILL MARK BRAINLIEST!
Read the excerpt from “Broken Chain.”
“Come on, man, let me use it,” Alfonso pleaded. “Please, Ernie, I’ll do anything.”
Although Ernie could see Alfonso’s desperation, he had plans with his friend Raymundo. They were going to catch frogs at the Mayfair canal. He felt sorry for his brother and gave him a stick of gum to make him feel better, but there was nothing he could do. The canal was three miles away, and the frogs were waiting.
Which message does Gary Soto want readers to take away?
Small gifts have great influence.
Achieving one's goals is unrealistic.
Friendship is something that everyone should value.
People place their own needs above those of others.
Answer:
People place their own needs above others
Explanation:
Answer: Small gifts have great influence
Explanation: In the text is states " He had plans with his friend Raymundo "
I can infer that he didn't want to cancel his plans so instead he gave him some gum to lighten him up
Hope this helps, and good luck ^^
PLEASE HELP QUICKLY: (FIRST ANSWER GETS BRAINLIEST)
Read these stanzas from “The Chimney Sweeper.” What is the poet saying about the lives of the sweepers?
Then naked and white, all their bags left behind,
They rise upon clouds, and sport in the wind.
And the Angel told Tom, if he'd be a good boy,
He'd have God for his father and never want joy.
And so Tom awoke; and we rose in the dark
And got with our bags and our brushes to work.
Though the morning was cold, Tom was happy and warm;
So if all do their duty, they need not fear harm.
Being poor is a part of God’s plan.
No one deserves to be treated badly.
If the boys are good in this life, they will be happy in the next.
Answer: If the boys are good in this life, they will be happy in the next. Hope this helps and by the way that was a beautiful poem.
Explanation:
I need help on this asap
Answer:
no
Explanation:
just dont
By ending the story in the present, the reader can infer that
Select one:
Ms. Gonzales has made a lifelong impact on Samantha
Samantha still spends time with Ms. Gonzales
Samantha uses the quilt all the time.
Samantha did not complete the community service assignment
Read the passage and answer the following question(s)
The Patchwork Quilt
Samantha paused in her spring cleaning to press her cheek against the soothing plumpness of the patchwork quilt. Its still–rich colors transported her mind back to the day she'd been given the quilt. In her mind's eye she could see herself going into Mrs. Gonzales's house that first, cloudy October afternoon. Putting down her broom, Samantha sat down at her bedroom desk and allowed herself the luxury of a little nostalgic dreaming...
Mrs. Gonzales, I'm here! fourteen–year–old Samantha called out softly in the dusty gloom of Mrs. Gonzales's front hallway.
Who is it? a thin, quivering voice replied from the direction of the bedroom.
Samantha! Samantha Parsons to read to you, Samantha answered, making her way down the dim hallway toward the old woman's bedroom. Standing in the doorway she took in the tidy, restful scene of the elderly woman sitting up in her bed wearing a frilly, purple nightgown, and slowly sorting square patches of bright fabric. Her fingers were bent and gnarled, but her nails were beautifully manicured in pink polish.
Ah, Samantha. I remember now. You gave me a fright just now, but come on in and sit down, she said cozily, pointing at a rocking chair beside her bed.
I'm sorry I scared you. Your daughter said I could let myself in. She left the door unlocked for me, as long as I locked it behind me when I came and when I left, Samantha explained, sitting down in the cushioned, but creaking, rocking chair.
Tell me, Niña, why do you want to read aloud to me? Rosa, my daughter, you know, said something about your school's community service program.
Yes, my English teacher has asked all of her classes to do something for the community for six hours each week. We get credit for English class because at the end of the semester I have to write a paper about my community service and what I learned from it. So, I thought... if I could... , Samantha faltered in her explanation, nervously biting her lower lip.
I see, I see, Mrs. Gonzales cackled merrily, then began to cough harshly, painfully. Her faded brown eyes filled with tears, and her lined face looked pained as her body shook with coughs. When she'd recovered from her coughing spell, she added, "You thought you could read aloud to an old invalid woman like me, eh? What shall we read, Niña?"
So, Samantha had read through many afternoons after school, while October, November and December rainstorms rumbled outside and Mrs. Gonzales painstakingly stitched her quilts and coughed. Samantha read To Kill a Mockingbird, Great Expectations, and a thick volume of Ernest Hemingway's short stories. It wasn't exactly entertaining, especially when she missed going to the movies or the mall after school with her friends, but gradually Samantha began to see the value of what she was doing for Mrs. Gonzales... and for herself. She began to fall in love with the characters in the books, especially Atticus Finch and his intrepid little daughter, Scout.
The second week in December, Mrs. Gonzales's lung disease took a turn for the worse, and she had to be hospitalized for immediate surgery. The evening after Mrs. Gonzales's surgery, her daughter Rosa came to the Parsons home with the good news that Mrs. Gonzales was recuperating well and would be home for New Year's Eve celebrations. She brought something else, too—a beautifully wrapped package which she presented to Samantha.
I know you read to my mother for a school assignment, but to her your time was like a special gift, so she wanted you to have this, and she asked me to tell you to please come and see her sometime. When you come, she wants you to please bring the paper you write about your community service experience.
Samantha opened the package with trembling fingers, and smiled when she saw what lay inside. It was the patchwork quilt Mrs. Gonzales had been piecing together on that first day Samantha had begun reading to her. Samantha thanked Rosa quietly as she opened the richly colored folds of the quilt, and said, "It's beautiful! Please tell your mother I'll always treasure it!"
...Samantha reluctantly brought her mind back from the memory of all of those afternoons she'd spent reading to the ailing Mrs. Gonzales. She'd never forget those novels and stories she'd read because the characters were as much a part of the experience as Mrs. Gonzales's friendship had been. Watching the woman's good–natured attitude toward her own suffering had taught Samantha an invaluable lesson about human endurance and courage. Gently folding the patchwork quilt, she put it back into the trunk at the foot of her bed, and picked up her broom again.
Answer:
Samantha did not complete the community service assignment
Answer: Well from reading the passage, I can definitely say, Ms, Gonzales has made a lifelong impact on Samantha.
Explanation:
Does having a minimum wage lead to better lives
Answer:
Most policy debates about increasing minimum wages focus on economic outcomes, such as unemployment and poverty. Although the research cited above demonstrates no consensus among investigators, numerous studies have found little or no effects on employment, while others have found reductions in poverty
Explanation:
Answer:
Hundreds of businesses across the country have pledged to pay their workers at least $12 an hour by 2020. Raising the minimum wage increases worker productivity. ... Economists have also linked higher wages to better physical and mental health and reduced “decision fatigue,” leading to higher productivity.
Explanation:
PLEASE HELP!!
Read the paragraphs below and then answer the question:
25. The scene of Christ's death, with the sharp spikes and the wrenching thud as the cross was dropped in the ground, has been told so often that we, who shrink from a news story on the death of a race horse or of baby seals, do not flinch at its retelling. It was a bloody death, an execution quite unlike the quick, sterile ones we know today: gas chambers, electric chairs, hangings. This one stretches on for hours in front of a jeering crowd.
26. Jesus' death is the cornerstone of the Christian faith, the most important fact of his coming. You can't follow Jesus without confronting His death; the Gospels bulge with its details. He laid out a trail of hints and bald predictions about it throughout His ministry, predictions that were only understood after the thing had been done, when to the disciples the dream looked shattered. His life seemed prematurely wasted. His triumphant words from the night before surely must have cruelly haunted His followers as they watched him groan and twitch on the cross.
SELECT ALL THAT APPLY
In paragraphs 25 and 26, Jesus' suffering and death is used as another incident showing the occurrence of suffering in our world. What good is it that Jesus suffered so badly and died such a horrible death (paragraphs 27 - 29)?
A. No one suffers alone because Jesus went through a life of pain.
B. He showed that our suffering is caused by our sin.
C. We are not abandoned.
D. It is no good at all.
Answer:
The correct answers are A) No one suffers alone because Jesus went through a life of pain.
And
C) We are not abandoned.
Explanation:
As a fictional writer, there are certain milestones you will need to reach for an effective?
A) Character description
B) Introduction
C) Conclusion
D) Plot
Answer:
D) Plot
Explanation:
The plot is the gist, the point, and part of the theme of the book. And the storyline is how you get from point A to point Z. I.e., the plot is the entire forest, and the storyline, the trees. Both organization and structure come into play here as well, the organization being the roadmap that the structure bolsters up
Which detail from The Narrative of The Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave by Frederick Douglass best supports the inference that he had previously tried to escape from slavery?
Answer:
One ex-slave who became very important in the abolitionist movement was Frederick Douglass. You will read about his life from his birth in approximately 1818 to the time when his first autobiography Opens in modal popup window was published (1845). By that time, Douglass had earned his freedom, worked for several years, and made an important speech to a white audience.
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass was so well written that many people doubted whether the writer had really been a slave. And it was so successful that Douglass had to flee to England to avoid being caught by slave hunters who were chasing him in the North. Eventually, several British friends paid Douglass's former master for Douglass's freedom, and Douglass returned to the United States as a legally free man.
In 1860, Douglass worked for the presidential campaign of Abraham Lincoln. During the Civil War that soon followed, Douglass recruited Union soldiers, including black soldiers, for two regiments in Massachusetts.
Douglass went on to publish two updates to his autobiography later in life—one in 1855 (still pre-Civil War) and another in 1881. He published a newspaper, gave lectures, and spoke out for human rights around the world.
Look at the time line to get an idea of where Frederick Douglass belongs in a historical context. Be sure to click the area between 1845 and 1865 for details about Douglass's role in the years leading up to, and including, the Civil War.
Explanation:
Hope this help
In what ways does dialog help build character
Answer:
Dialogue can help you establish the backstory, and it can reveal important plot details that the reader may not know about yet. Dialogue is great for ratcheting up the tension between characters. Dialogue can also establish the mood.
Explanation:
Hope this helps!
I got a comment saying "it must be in english/spanish" does that mean one of them or both ?
Answer:
one of them
Explanation:
One of them because its given you a choice to pick either of the two
HELP ASAP 20 POINTS
Which moral was Aesop most likely teaching in "The Bundle of Sticks"?
-Parents are wise.
-Greed is dangerous.
-Children are disobedient.
-Strength is in unity.
Answer:
Strength is in Unity
Explanation:
Answer:
the last one im pretty sure correct me if im wrong
the code is 338 015 9348 and the password is 3eY5FA
Answer:
Okay?
Explanation:
Answer:
you shouldnt be posting this kind of stuff :p
Explanation:
PLZ HELLLP!! I need a very very short story. it can be about anything but with some sort of twist in the end. anything simple will do.
Minimum of 150 words.
Answer: This story takes place in Chinatown, New York, where a drought has caused a famine, resulting in everyone starving to death and suffering. The townspeople, Aurora, Bing, Bo, Bojing, Chao, Wohang, Malana, Uett, Wong, Ilan, muhang, Jing, Hing, Aya and many others were in danger and fearful of what the future might hold for them. Their spirits were helpless and when the lord came, things only got worse for them. This is a story about finding hope through the worst of times.
1. A lord by the name of Ozawa, who looked well-fed and in expensive clothing, visited the village with his army to ask the townspeople to hand whatever money they had. A man by the name of Bojing, dressed in brown rags, went up to the lord and tried handing him 3 dimes, but his hand got pushed away by one of the guards, dropping the money. The lord, with a confused look on his face, thought he was being attacked so he told his men to seize Bojing The guards, dressed in intimidating armor, intervened and arrested the man.
2. A few days after he was arrested, his friends visited him and tried to explain to the jailer what had happened. The jailer didn't believe what they had to say and turned them away saying “Bojing had to serve his 2 month sentence”. Bojing, however, never gave up hope and spent the time in jail planning his revenge against Ozawa. He believed that if he could make the lord pay, it would help the village.
3. Bojing was pacing in his jail cell thinking about reasoning with the lord in order to get him to help the village. His argument would be, “if the villages under your control were poor and starving, you will appear useless, weakening your rule.” Bojing was planning to use the lord's confidence against him to control him into helping the village and possibly making him give up his power.
Answer:
It was a stormy morning at the bus stop. I was standing in a puddle when it began raining fish. I know it's crazy, but it's true. I was questioning it so I went to the smartest person in town. Flikaira. She told me the phenomenon was called Fishy Weather, which occurs every 30 years. But something about this year was different from the Fishy Weather 30 years ago. These fish are alive. They sprouted legs and chase me. I duck in the bushes. The fish are smarter than normal fish, too. They have razor-sharp teeth that cut through the bush. I scream like a girl and run.
The fish are too fast. One grabs my legs. When did they grow arms? One grabs my arms. The fish open there big wide mouth and gobble me up. "Johnny? Johnny? Are you okay?" I hear Mom ask. I glance over at my clock. 6:25. It was all a dream. Just a dream. I look outside my window. Nothing. Yep, a dream. A really crazy messed up dream. Suddenly my window breaks and a fish with legs and arms jumps in and eats me. I see light and hear MEAP MEAP MEAP. Okay, another dream. I wait for a while. Yep it was just a dream.
what is the theme of the story in cats save the day??
Answer:
It was Saturday morning in the Da Silva household, and Bianca was daydreaming as she waited
for her family to come down for breakfast. Her mind was filled with the things she learned at
school that week and what she would do for the weekend. Her mind was so busy, and she had
so many rushing thoughts, that she didn’t see the neighbor’s cat climb through the window.
The next minute, the spotty cat was curling around Bianca’s legs. Bianca, as if falling from the
sky, snapped out of her daydream and saw the feline smiling up at her.
Explanation:
i found it out by the book have
Would appreciate by marking me the brainiest
Please give 3 themes to the book Mystery on Church Hill. And when it was demonstrated in the story.
Also is the conflict character vs ? what is it.
Answer:
Since his wife, Michelle, left seven years ago, Jeffy Coltrane has worked to maintain a normal life for himself and his eleven-year-old daughter, Amity, in Suavidad Beach. It’s a quiet life, until a local eccentric known as Spooky Ed shows up on their doorstep.
Ed entrusts Jeffy with hiding a strange and dangerous object—something he calls “the key to everything”—and tells Jeffy that he must never use the device. But after a visit from a group of ominous men, Jeffy and Amity find themselves accidentally activating the key and discovering an extraordinary truth. The device allows them to jump between parallel planes at once familiar and bizarre, wondrous and terrifying. And Jeffy and Amity can’t help but wonder, could Michelle be just a click away?
Jeffy and Amity aren’t the only ones interested in the device. A man with a dark purpose is in pursuit, determined to use its grand potential for profound evil. Unless Amity and Jeffy can outwit him, the place they call home may never be safe again.
Explanation: