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[] Explanation []
When public reading or speaking, there are a lot of do's and dont's when using your hands. If you use your hands in the correct way, you can guide your speech and catch your audience's attention.
Using your hands to speak or tell a story helps guide your speech. When telling about how big something was, you might use your hands to gesture or create something big. When describing something tiny, you will use your hands for the same thing.
Using your hands also helps you out in a number of ways. It helps prevent monotone. Monotone is when your voice does not contain any pitch or fluctuation, and you sound like robot. When using your hands, your voice will move the way your hands move. When your hands are by your side and flat, your voice might get flat. When you gesture to something big, your voice may get louder and have more depth.
Answer:
The logical answer would be footstep, but since that's not it, the only other thing I could think of would be breath.
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.
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Thus, the<u> correct answer is option A.
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Answer:
Location: Waterfall.
The water is a beautiful blue with a crystal clarity. Its waters sparkle like diamonds under the sun. Many bright and vibrant fish swim in its waters. Crustaceans crawl in the depths and through the rocks sliding like spy's between walls in the cracks of the rocks. The sun trees around it dance in the wind creating a peaceful scene of nature. The sound of the flowing water, dancing trees, and distant animals blends together in one harmonious song. The scene satisfies my eyes and my soul.
The correct answer to this question is letter "c. the poet is wishing the world to remember her after she is gone."
This is my letter to the world that never wrote to me— the simple news that nature told— with tender majesty her message is committed to hands i cannot see— for love of her—sweet—countrymen— judge tenderly—of me. The most accurate paraphrase of this poem is that <span>the poet is wishing the world to remember her after she is gone. </span>