The most likely answer to this problem would be A. correct spelling, grammar, and punctuation.
This is on the grounds, of course, that the names utilized in the print advertisements especially to the names of the product and company are all in the standard grammar and spelling. When this is not given enough attention, it would immediately give the target audience the idea of incompetency such to an extent that it would consider the product and/or the company worthless. Having many different fonts, colors, and graphics would only create inconsistency and would irritate the audience. Spilling all the beans would only result to the diminishing of the interests of the audience. References that appeal to teenagers would be situational since it is not at all times that the target audience would be teenagers or the like.
Answer:
Ruth's relations with the other family members are very good. Lena is the family matriarch and the mother of Walter, but she and Ruth generally get along as a mother and daughter would. Lena may empathize with her because she also married into the family.
Explanation:
1- "I, Too" reflects the speaker's desire to be accepted as part of America. The speaker is an African -American slave. The "I" stands for the African- American speaker and the " too" stands for the fact that he has to be accepted as part of the American nation. The period reflected in the poem ,then, is that of racism during the early 20's in TheU.S.
2- The main theme seen through the poem is patriotism. The speaker is " the darker brother". He has got white brothers in America. They all s<em>ing America.</em>
3- Cullen 's poems are also reflective of racism. He deals with the African -American's soul and their emotions. He is worried about the situation of the African- Americans in Harlem. After they fought in the WWI, they could not get any job in the U.S. However, Cullen also deals with the union of blacks and whites in his poems.
Answer:
When Emmett heard about the sickness of Henrietta and that she needed blood, he threw the metal tube he was holding and run for his brother and friend, so that they could help her.
Explanation:
When Henrietta got sick, everything else didn’t matter. She was a symbol of love, of strength. She was the base of her house. She always kept food on the table, she was a very hard-working person and always there for everyone who needed her.
The news about her sickness left no one indifferent. This is te sign of love that everyone felt towards Henrietta.
Answer:
Mrs. Hutchinson really wanted to stop being trapped in a world where she couldn't change anything, where the Lottery was something as natural as day or night, and she was already tired of being a woman who always struggled to fit into that society. She didn't want to follow the rules, but she was a rebellious person inside, and perhaps for her the only way to escape was to die. Although she seems abnegated and peaceful, she actually thinks that the Lottery is unfair and even its late the Lotttery's day. Tess Hutchinson wants to end all that, even dying. It is also logical to think that she succeeded.
Explanation: