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Read the passage from "Names/Nombres" by Julia Alvarez.

My Dominican heritage was never more apparent than when my extended
family attended school occasions. For my graduation, they all came, the whole lot of aunts and uncles and the many little cousins who snuck in without tickets. They sat in the first row in order to better understand the Americans' fast-spoken English. But how could they listen when they were constantly speaking among themselves in florid­sounding phrases, rococo consonants, rich, rhyming vowels?

Which influence does Alvarez write about in this passage?

A. popular culture
B. her culture
C. her friends
D. her neighbors

User Mia
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

B. her culture

Step-by-step explanation:

because she is talking about her family and the language they are speaking. so because it her family she may also speak that language.

User Armand DOHM
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5 votes

Answer:

B. Her culture.

Step-by-step explanation:

Julia Alvarez's personal story/essay "Names/Nombres" details her experience of having to maintain her Dominican heritage and the American identity she had adopted in her new country. This story reveals some of her dilemma in maintaining her identity even at times when she don't feel like.

The passage given in the question shows the influence of her family or rather Dominican culture when they had to come to her school occasions. Her Dominican heritage was most apparent at these events, especially her graduation ceremony where almost all of her extended family had come to witness the historic event in their family. She had commented on how they were all so engrossed within themselves that they wouldn't even be able to listen to the word in fast spoken English used by the Americans even though they were seated at the front.

User Tom Bird
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