C it has to be priori knowledge.
It can be because satire often presents things that the audience realizes but is unable to formulate using linguistic means or are afraid of saying them due to censorship or similar things. That's why satire can be a vessel for shaping public opinion since it expresses what everyone is thinking without people having to say it. It also helps people understand the problem even more deeply.
These words which are used before a noun or a pronoun to show its
relationship with another word in the sentence are called prepositions.
Emily’s climactic speech is an example of A- thematic development and B-figurative language.
Emily Webb , one of the characters of "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder, is dead and has come to the world of the living for a moment. The lines refer to some of her memories because she wishes to remember a typical day at Grover's Corner.
<u>Thematic developmen</u>t is present because she describes the same place ,cosy home, and the same routine , sleeping and waking up, following a sequence. Her description looks like a camera taking different close ups of the same place where the same routine is done. From <em>clocks</em> , she passes onto <em>food </em>and <em>coffee</em>; then she moves to <em>pressed clothes</em> and <em>hot baths</em> and finally to <em>sleeping</em> and <em>waking up.</em>
<u>Figurative language</u> is also present ; the character uses imagery appealing to the sense of hearing : <em>clocks ticking; </em>she also appeals to the sense of sight: <em>Mama's sunflowers </em> and <em>new-ironed dresses</em>. The sense of feeling temperature is reflected: <em>hot bath. </em>Then, the character uses allusion when she says: "Oh, earth, you're too wonderful for anybody to realize you". She alludes to the living because they cannot appreciate the beauty of being alive.
Julia's soccer team played against Riverside High's soccer team and lost.