The answer should be climax sorry I just saw your question today I hope I wasn't to late and if I was I'm really sorry
Answer:
"I'll take care of you. I'll take care of your city. If you want a job, and you want infrastructure to improve our city, do the smart thing and vote for me."
Explanation:
This statement is most likely the answer because it guarantees the citizens that the candidate will create more jobs, and take care of the city.
Answer: The answer is A :D
Explanation:
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
From Caramelo, by Sandra Cisneros
"A bungalow, a duplex, a brownstone, an apartment. Something, anything, because the Grandmother’s gloominess was the contagious kind, infecting every member of the household as fiercely as the bubonic plague".
The figurative language in lines 5 through 7 establishes a tone of
1) loneliness
2)confusion
3)desperation
4)shame
Answer: 3)desperation
Explanation:
The description of the grandmother´s bad mood like something contagious as a plague shows the desperation the character feels in that situation. The grandmother being unhappy and therefore mean to those who live with her, pushes the narrator and everyone in that family to desperately find somewhere else for her to live.
Answer:
President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act in 1830 to relocate Native Indians to the west. In his "On Indian Removal" speech, he discusses how Indian Removal benefits both Indians and White Americans. A personal story about a young boy being relocated with his clan on the Trail of Tears is another writing about Native American removal. Though these two readings deal with the same subject, they use quite different language to express their views on Native American removal. The situation is described differently in both pieces, as is the sentence structure and tone. The language differences between Jackson's "On Indian Removal" and Rutledge's "Samuel's Memory" show how separate groups viewed and were affected by Indian removal.