Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railroad
Which passage from the text most strongly supports the answer to question 5?
A. “Everyone on the plantation admired this skill of Ben's. Even the master, Edward Brodas.”
B. “There was something free and wild in Harriet because of Ben.”
C. “He said the Big Buckwater River, which lay off to the southeast of the plantation, was just a little stream compared to the Choptank, and the Choptank was less than nothing compared to the Bay.”
D. “Old Rit taught Harriet the words of that song that the slaves were forbidden to sing, because of the man named Denmark Vesey, who had urged the other slaves to revolt by telling them about Moses and the children of Israel.”
Answers
Explanation:
Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railroad
Which passage from the text most strongly supports the answer to question 5?
A. “Everyone on the plantation admired this skill of Ben's. Even the master, Edward Brodas.”
B. “There was something free and wild in Harriet because of Ben.”
C. “He said the Big Buckwater River, which lay off to the southeast of the plantation, was just a little stream compared to the Choptank, and the Choptank was less than nothing compared to the Bay.”
D. “Old Rit taught Harriet the words of that song that the slaves were forbidden to sing, because of the man named Denmark Vesey, who had urged the other slaves to revolt by telling them about Moses and the children of Israel.”
Answer:
Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railroad
Which passage from the text most strongly supports the answer to question 5?
A. “Everyone on the plantation admired this skill of Ben's. Even the master, Edward Brodas.”
B. “There was something free and wild in Harriet because of Ben.”
C. “He said the Big Buckwater River, which lay off to the southeast of the plantation, was just a little stream compared to the Choptank, and the Choptank was less than nothing compared to the Bay.”
ANSWER
D. “Old Rit taught Harriet the words of that song that the slaves were forbidden to sing, because of the man named Denmark Vesey, who had urged the other slaves to revolt by telling them about Moses and the children of Israel.”