Answer:
I was reminded of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 a day or two ago while reading Ian Bogost on Apple’s Airpods. Bogost examined Airpods’ potential long term social consequences. “Human focus, already ambiguously cleft between world and screen,” he suggests, “will become split again, even when maintaining eye contact.” A little further on, he writes, “Everyone will exist in an ambiguous state between public engagement with a room or space and private retreat into devices or media.”
Answer:
"Whatever you want to say, all day, until night folds up and files it away" is a second stanza from <em>the Metaphor</em>, a poem written by Eve Merriam. The poem explores the theme of temporariness of all the things, and expresses hope for the future. What the author was trying to convey in this line is that everything we say (or do) goes away at the end of the day. Each new day is a new beginning, a new chance for each one of us to start over.
Explanation:
it depends what the book is about but I would say C or D
Answer:
D
Explanation:
it is because they are very sad of themselves