The speaker uses a lot of informal language in I ain't a women throughout the speech. Do you think that doing so strengthens or weakens the overall argument? Why?
Is this the one right? https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ApCfl8XgrfMQOZ8lR4fS_fkjOAqpg16V/view
yuh
yes thank you!
But yes, I personally think it strengthens the overall argument. I mean she is trying to (inform)/(persuade) all people in America all woman should have the same rights men have and have their natural-born human rights. (The legal rights men have) But this speech is also talking about how even if the color of her skin identifies her as an "African American" or any other woman in the world in her day, they should not be treated differently than a woman that is (White). So her basic overall argument she is trying to get across is no matter the color of a woman's skin they should still have equal rights as a man of any skin color would have. (Not my best, but I hope this helps. U don't have to use all these words but re-word some of it into ur answer maybe?)
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