Answer:
They offer help in the education of those who wish to work in other countries and other cultures.
OR
try to clarify whether certain behavior patterns are characteristic for a certain group or a certain culture or whether they are valid for humanity
Personification and there is more than one answer
Answer:
Aaron Burr and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton discuss the legacy of the deceased General Mercer, pondering what their own legacies will be, and Hamilton's attempt to gain approval from Congress for his proposed financial system. Their discussion is interrupted as Hamilton is ushered to a secret dinner table meeting, at which he, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison agree upon an unprecedented political compromise. The capital city of their new nation will be situated on the Potomac River, politically and geographically placing it in the South, Jefferson and Madison's home region; in exchange for the Democratic-Republican Party's support of Hamilton's financial plan. Burr ponders Jefferson's reports on the meeting, and enviously comments on how the American people, and more specifically himself, had no agency in this decision. He decides to rectify this by running for political office in an effort to be in the metaphorical "room where it happens"—i.e., to be a party to important decisions.
Claire Lampen of Yahoo News explained "History has drawn much of its information on the compromise from Thomas Jefferson's account of the evening, according to PBS; neither Miranda nor anyone else can be entirely certain what happened behind those closed doors".[4] This grants Miranda artistic liberty and freedom in retelling the story of the compromise.
Explanation:
Answer:
<h3>
<u>The Necklace</u></h3>
setting:
•1884 Paris,France Loisels apartment,party at the Ministry of Education's Mansion.
character:
•Mathilde Loisel
Conflict:
<em>INTERNAL-</em>
•Mme. Loisel vs. Herself:her excessive pride,materialism and shallowness cause her emotional suffering as she fells she's been deprived of luxuries.
<em>EXTERNAL-</em>
•Mme. Loisel vs. M. Loisel's different values (although he is tolerant of her behavior and wants to please her)
Plot:
•A woman who craved wealth loses a borrowed diamond necklace at a ball, and she and her husband are reduced to a life of poverty to pay for its replacement. She then finds out the necklace was worthless.
Theme:
•greed, deceptive appearance, beautiful and vanity.
Point of view:
•In this short story, The Necklace, it is told by the narrator.Therefore, it is in third person limited because you only read the thoughts of the husband and Mme. Loisel.
<u>I HOPE THIS HELP^^</u>