Answer: 1) the speech was delivered to a massive group of civil rights marchers gathered around the Lincoln memorial in Washington DC.
2)buoyant and hopeful and all with a sense of determination.
3) is that one-hundred years after the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed the slaves, African Americans were still treated as inferior people in the United States.
4)that America has not yet made significant progress in awarding civil rights and fair treatment to African-Americans.
5) “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”
6)Martin Luther King, Jr. used the phrase “Five score years ago…” in his “I Have a Dream” speech. This is a reference to President Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, which originally began with “Four score and seven years ago…” As you can see, King's phrasing is a subtle reference, hence an allusion
Explanation: hope this helps:)
Answer:1).August 28 Martin Luther King, Jr. delivers "I Have a Dream" speech at the March on Washington On the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., the African American civil rights movement reaches its high-water mark when Martin Luther King, Jr., speaks to about 250,000 people attending the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
2)I would say the speech was really outgoing.
3)Around the time he wrote his famed “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” King decided to move forward with the idea for another event that coordinated with Negro American Labor Council (NACL) founder A. Philip Randolph’s plans for a job rights march.
4)Speaking during the march on Washington, D.C. in 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. claims that African Americans have come to the nation's capital to cash "a promissory note," a note that must be honored or there will be no tranquility in America.
5) “If you can’t fly then run, if you can’t run then walk, if you can’t walk then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward.”. “Only in the darkness can you see the stars.”. – Martin Luther King Jr.
6)Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream Speech," delivered on the National Mall on August 28, 1963—one of the most (if not the most) powerful statements on the urgency of equality and civil rights for Black Americans—is in part a product of King's background as a Baptist minister, in which powerful rhetoric and figurative language (such as allusion) plays a role in every sermon. The speech is grounded in the sermon tradition, with its rich texture of imagery, metaphor, allusion, and passion.
King begins his allusive pattern in the second paragraph of the speech:
Five score years ago a great American in whose symbolic shadow we stand today signed the Emancipation Proclamation.
With his use of five score years ago, King is alluding to the Gettysburg Address, given by Abraham Lincoln to commemorate the cemetery at Gettysburg in 1863, a short speech that is often considered the speech that began to make America whole again during the Civil War, even though the war had two more years to run.
2.But under the fake windsounds of the open lanes, in the abandoned lots below, new grasses sprout,
3.Once, I wanted out, wanted the rigid lanes to take me to a place without sun, without the smell of tomatoes burning on swing shift in the greasy summer air. 4.Maybe it's here en los campos extraños de esta ciudad where I'll find it, that part of me
Maybe it's here
en los campos extraños de esta ciudad
where I'll find it, that part of me
i think it is this because in this context of home and belonging it means as to where the narrator believes he or she will fit in and be free to live as they choose.
Answer:
4. Maybe it's here en los campos extraños de esta ciudad where I'll find it, that part of me.
Explanation:
In this setting of home and having a place it implies concerning where the storyteller trusts the individual in question will fit in and be allowed to live as they choose.
Answer:
What does this mean?
Explanation:
prove. (You typically only find these in non-fiction pieces, but they may occasionally show up in fictional
pieces.) In order to write strong thesis statements, you have to practice. The two
main components for a
good thesis statement are the subject (what you are talking about) and your opinion (how you feel about it).
Of course, we have to do this in a professional way, so you can't just write something like, "Dogs are cool."
Let's imagine that you are writing a research essay about how the brain works. (That's a hint, by the way!)
What type of thesis statement could you write? Here is one example. "The brain is amazing because of its
capacity to remember things." or "Our psychological processes are incredibly complicated. Each of these
has a subject (brain remembering things, or psychological processes) and an opinion (amazing or incredibly
complicated). Now, your task today is to create 5 thesis statements. I'd suggest that you write them about
the brain to get a head start on your big project, or you can pick any subject you know something about. The
most important thing is that they have a subject and an opinion! Write these 5 thesis statements and submit
them to your instructor.
Answer:
Explanation: Some attention getter quotes to support your thesis regarding brain work could be the following::
a. Storage capacity of your brain is virtually unlimited.
b. Your brain produces sufficient electricity to light-up a small bulb.
c. Different brain circuits are involved with reading aloud or silently.
d. Your brain by itself does not feel pain.
e. Reading allows your brain to download info directly.
f. Brains of two musicians performing together can synchronize.
Answer:
I can't answer due to there being no attachment but thanks for the points
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express?
Answer: Both authors are against the soda ban.
Answer:
i’ll help what is it
Explanation: