The tricky mind of Mark Twain's yokels in The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County is certain to incite giggling and a gratefulness for Twain's uncanny ear for the tongue. Henry's destitution stricken couple in The Gift of the Magi encounter a touch of destiny that no one but love can bring, and when it happens on Christmas Eve, it is substantially more fulfilling. One of Edgar Allan Poe's most popular stories, The Cask of Amontillado, with the dangerous craziness of its storyteller, the primal dread it stimulates, and its unexpected silliness has captivated perusers for a long time. Naturalism and humanoid attribution are vital components in Jack London's To Build a Fire, as the story's absurd Yukon voyager pushes his puppy toward their inverse destinies subsequent to disregarding smarter men's recommendation.
Well, there could be a lot of outcomes with lying, so the effect could be something such as getting caught or feeling guilty.
Answer: D. a counterclaim to the idea that most people are moral.
Explanation: a counterclaim is a claim made to rebut an idea, in this case that idea is that most people are moral, according to the excerpt this idea was in a lesson by Socrates. The counterclaim was made by a student named Glaucon who, by telling a story from Plato's Republic, expressed his argument about how the humans couldn't resist the temptation of evil if they knew no one would see them.
I would say that this sentence contains examples of colloquialism.
Colloquialism is <span>a word or phrase that is not formal or literary and is used in ordinary or familiar conversation.</span>