These strategies are all ineffective when dealing with interpersonal conflict. Avoiding it will not solve the conflict. In fact, it can make it grow even larger. Competing with one another is also a strategy that might damage your attempts at reconciliation. Finally, compromising your viewpoint, attitudes and behaviour is ineffective because it takes away the opportunity of exchanging ideas and points of view.
Answer:
Frederick Douglass wished that the slaves should be kept ignorant so they do not rebel or overpower their masters. He also thought that if they were to do this it could cause chaos in the south and create a racial war.
Brainlist Pls!
The answer is D. Not only the muffler but also the spark plugs need to be replaced.
a scrim
the universal
the resolution
Answer:
Monologue
Explanation:
Theme: Physical punishment is not only painful but also humiliating.
Subject: A young boy does his homework but gets it wrong.
Theme: Corporal punishment is always necessary to maintain discipline.
Subject: A young boy is ridiculed by his friends because of his low status.
The correct answers are:
Subject: A young boy does his homework but gets it wrong.
Theme: Physical punishment is not only painful but also humiliating.
In this passage, Kevin Sweeny, presents his homework to his school teacher, who is a priest. However, the homework is not correct, and apparently has been done by his father instead of the kid himself. Therefore, the teacher decides to punish Kevin.
This punishment proves to be not only physically painful to Kevin but also incredibly humiliating. As the priest whips the fingers of both of Kevin's hands, he laughed at his father for being a barman and said that if he continued down this path he would encounter the same fate.
Answers...
A. when something has meaning beyond itself
B. a comparison using like or as
C. the use of an extended metaphor
D. writing or speech not intended to be only literal
An example of a conceit in poetry includes Shakespeare’s well-known sonnet, Sonnet 18, which begins “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” Throughout the poem, the subject (the person the narrator is talking about) is compared to a summer's day, making this an extended metaphor.