In accordance with the excerpt given, the answer is emotional language and vivid imagery. The author instigates the readers’ imagination by guiding them into picturing all the victims of the tragedy, their photos gathered, the mixture of races and traces, “a map of the world”. She strongly calls the USA a mongrel nation, not only to express how diverse it is in terms of races but also to express diversity of opinions, beliefs. Even though those opinions and beliefs may keep people apart due to our human tendency to judge what and who we see as different, in times of tragedy the country “has one spirit”. The same way death makes no distinction, neither does grief. The segregating opinions and beliefs disappear in the face of pain, of kindness, of the need to support and be supported.
None of the sentences start with a capital letter, so technically none of them are correctly punctuated :p
Your answer is this one:
"The kids in my class want to become more self-sufficient."
:)
False. creating a good outline takes skill or practice.