Answer:
Two examples of figurative language used by Douglass on his speech are Allusion and Synecdoche.
Explanation:
When he says: <em>"What I ask for the Negro is not benevolence, not pity, not sympathy, but simply justice." , </em>he expresses it as if it was a desire of his own, when in reality the effect he wants to achieve is that people realize that it is not a desire of him, but a <em>right</em> of all black men. There is when he is using Allusion.
When he says: <em>“What shall we do with the Negro?” I have had but one answer from the beginning. Do nothing with us!..."</em>, he is appealing to the racism feeling of the word "<em>Negro</em>", instead of using the term "black man", to make a bigger impact on the listeners. This is where Synecdoche is used.
Finally he manages to have power in his speech, receiving an applause after his words.
A moment of having an idea or a sudden moment of realization.
Answer:
Create safe, public-friendly waste disposal options and advertise them. Create laws that impose stiff fines for the perpetrators and advertise these stiff fines. Use Illegal Dumping Cameras to catch the perpetrators in the act. Use Social Media to ask the public to identify the perpetrators.
<em>The question has already been answered, but I guess you need an explanation.</em>
<em></em>
Answer:
<em>They are buying them for him</em>
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Explanation:
To properly understand this, you need to know about the subject-object agreement.
This agreement follows:
[S] [P] [O}
<em>S: Subject represent who does an action</em>
<em>P: Predicate is what is being done</em>
<em>O: Object receives of the action.</em>
<em />
In the given words, the predicate is "buying"
So, you need to know who is buying something and what is being bought
<em>"They" -----> the subject </em>
<em>"are buying" ----> the predicate </em>
<em>"them" ---> the object </em>
<em>"for him" ---> to whom the object is being bought for</em>