Answer:
A. People connect with their culture by continually revisiting past traditions.
Explanation:
Alice Walker's <em>Everyday Use</em> revolves around the lives of the three women, mother-daughters, and their perception about what constitutes heritage, tradition, culture, and one's identity. Mama and Maggie may life in a dilapidated house but their sense of identity to their roots remains unbroken whereas the 'better educated' daughter Dee "Wangero" is more of a 'westernized' approach to her identity.
In the given passage, Dee hates the fact that her desired quilts were given to her sister Maggie who will only<em> "put them to everyday use" </em>whereas her own plan was to put them up like some souvenir and put in on display and not use it. The narrator Mama recollects the time when she had offered those same quilts to her when she first went to college but she had called them <em>"old-fashioned, out of style"</em> and refused to take them. And now that she's had a place of her own, she wanted to 'show-off' her heritage and tradition and use it as a way to 'decorate' her house. So, <u><em>judging by the way the author decided to portray the characters to their relationship with the quilt, the book's title </em></u><u><em>Everyday Use</em></u><u><em> seemed likely to signify how people connect and feel connected with their culture through the frequent revisiting of past traditions.
</em></u>
Thus, the<u> correct answer is option A.
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Answer:
A = an important step in metacognition
Explanation:
1.the heads on Easter island and how they move
2. how the pyramids were built
3. how the temperature of the earth is changing
<span>In Birches, the author uses the line "like girls on hands and knees that throw their hair before them over their heads to dry in the sun" to describe C. the shape of the trees after an ice storm.
The trees bend like these girls who dry their hair in the sun.
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Answer:
I think it is ethos.
Explanation:
I believe it is ethos because it uses evidence from a profession to back up the claim.