Read the passage from A Raisin in the Sun.LINDNER: Yes—that's the way we feel out in Clybourne Park. And that's why I was elected to come here this afternoon and talk to you people. Friendly like, you know, the way people should talk to each other and see if we couldn't find some way to work this thing out. As I say, the whole business is a matter of caring about the other fellow. Anybody can see that you are a nice family of folks, hard-working and honest I'm sure. (BENEATHA frowns slightly, quizzically, her head tilted regarding him.) Today everybody knows what it means to be on the outside of something. And of course, there is always somebody who is out to take advantage of people who don't always understand.WALTER: What do you mean?LINDNER: Well—you see our community is made up of people who've worked hard as the dickens for years to build up that little community. They're not rich and fancy people; just hard-working, honest people who don't really have much but those little homes and a dream of the kind of community they want to raise their children in. Now, I don't say we are perfect and there is a lot wrong in some of the things they want. But you've got to admit that a man, right or wrong, has the right to want to have the neighborhood he lives in a certain kind of way. And at the moment the overwhelming majority of our people out there feel that people get along better, take more of a common interest in the life of the community, when they share a common background. I want you to believe me when I tell you that race prejudice simply doesn't enter into it. It is a matter of the people of Clybourne Park believing, rightly or wrongly, as I say, that for the happiness of all concerned that our Negro families are happier when they live in their own communities.BENEATHA (with a grand and bitter gesture): This, friends, is the Welcoming Committee!WALTER (dumfounded, looking at LINDNER): Is this what you came marching all the way over here to tell us? . . . .RUTH: Lord have mercy, ain't this the living gall!How does the playwright use dialogue to develop the message in this passage? a. Beneatha’s use of sarcasm shows how people can unintentionally hurt those they care about. b. Lindner's good manners and polite words show that segregation can be subtle and indirect. c. The rapid pace of Beneatha, Walter, and Ruth's dialogue shows that direct confrontation is the best way to resolve differences. d. Walter's questions and Ruth's exclamation develop the message that communication breakdowns are often the fault of both parties.

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

Answer:

b. Lindner's good manners and polite words show that segregation can be subtle and indirect.

Explanation:

This is the best way to describe the way in which the playwright uses dialogue to develop the message in this passage. In this passage, we learn that Lindner tells the family that he does not believe they should live in Clybourne Park. He is being racist. However, he conveys this meaning through polite words and good manners. This shows that segregation can sometimes be subtle and indirect.

Answer 2
Answer:

Answer:

The Answer Above is Correct

Explanation:


Related Questions

In act III, scene I, of Shakespeare's Hamlet, why does Hamlet speak rudely to Ophelia, telling her "Get thee to a nunnery"?
Which of these products would be most likely to have dependent demand
Which is a feature of the passage that identifies it as a portion of a memoir?A. It is a description of a turning point in the writer's life.B. It is a record of a significant historical moment.C. It provides satiric commentary on the social context of events.D. It records and offers insight into a personal experience.
Which phrase from the story BEST indicates that it is a folktale?A " ....according to old stories.."B "at lenght he arrived at a piece of firm ground..." C "....he did not even fear the devil."D "...this was an uneasy secret...."
Which sentence contains a linking verb? A. George will be moving in one month.B. I will be on time for the meeting.C. Michelle slowly walked to the store.D. The plants wilted in the stifling heat.

In "I am Land. I Wait.." the speaker is..?an Italian woman
an angry environmentalist
some binoculars
the land

Answers

My opinion is the land, but i need to know if you agree or disagree so we can figure out what the answer is. 

Answer:

D. the land

Explanation:

. In which of the following sentences is a semicolon used correctly? A. Joe watered; the garden yet the plants did not grow.
B. Joe watered the garden but the plants; did not grow.
C. Joe watered the garden; however, the plants did not grow.
D. Joe watered the garden and; the plants did not grow.

Answers

C. A semi colon can be used to attach sentences together that can be used on their own but are related to one another

Which pronoun best completes the sentence? The documentary about Louisa May Alcott was more exciting to you than to __________ . A. me B. we C. I D. my

Answers

A. me 
think about.....it more excting to you than it will be to me, or its more excting to you than its is/was to me.
Its pretty obvious. The answer is A, because it is the only one that makes sense.

An example of a frame story is "The Necklace." True False

Answers

Answer:

False.

Explanation:

A frame narrative is the form or style of writing a story that has another story within itself. Simply put, a frame narrative is a story within a story, where the characters in a novel/ story tell another story in the story.

Guy de Maupassant's "The Necklace" tells the story of the Loisels' lives and the subsequent loss of a borrowed necklace. This led them to use up their savings and even borrow money to cover the cost of the lost necklace, which turned out to be just a fake/ copy. There is no story within the main story frame. So, this short story is not an example of a frame narrative.

I think its false. I read it a while ago, but if I remember correctly, its not a frame story.

a small glider is coasting horizontally when suddenly a very heavy piece of cargo falls out of the bottom of the plane. you can neglect air resistance. just after the cargo has fallen out

Answers

The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Neither the cargo nor the plane change speed." A small glider is coasting horizontally when suddenly a very heavy piece of cargo falls out of the bottom of the plane.

Further explanation

Air resistance is the frictional force experienced by objects as they move through the air or the air flowing around them. Air resistance is usually opposed to the movement of objects or the flow of air around them, and is created by air friction on the outer surface of objects.

Air resistance represents the strength that is contrary to the relative motion of an object as it passes through the air. The air resistance acts opposite to the speed of the incoming flow, thus slowing the object.

heavier objects and lighter objects fall just as fast when only in a vacuum or without air. So as soon as there is air, heavier objects will fall faster than lighter objects.

the theory put forward by Aristotle is that objects will fall at a speed that depends on the mass of each of these objects. This explains that heavier objects will touch the ground faster than objects with lighter mass.

This opinion was later refuted by Galileo Galilei by conducting an attempt to drop two objects with different masses simultaneously at the same height. The next thing that happens is, both objects touch the ground at the same time. This leads us to the conclusion that all objects will fall at the same exact rate if the influence of air resistance is ignored. Objects that are dropped will accelerate which in time we will know as gravitational acceleration.

Learn  More

Air resistance : brainly.com/question/1162091

Details

Class: high school

Subject: english

Keywords : Air resistance

Since 2010, what has changed in regards to advertising and the beauty standards set by advertisements? If you believe it has changed, do you think it's a positive change, negative change, or just simply different? Explain why you think this.

Answers

Answer:

Explanation:

Obviously, the change is negative, because the beauty standards shown in the advertisements are impossible, unreachable. The impact it has on society is that, as the advertisements encourage society to think about a certain standard, those who don't meet the line feel inferior, misfit, and have a higher chance to develop conflicts with their own image.