Answer:
In her best selling memoir, Curtis writes, “We all have something to learn from the memories of our parents.”
Explanation:
Answer:
a) FIRST FIREMAN: We're the firemen, Mr. Barclay. (They remove their hats.)
Explanation:
A parody is a literary device that makes use of emulation to depict a specific person or some other target to produce a comic effect by the usage of exaggeration.
The backdrop to the story is that there was a raging fire in the hotel where Mr Barclay was and that inferno was already making its way towards where he was. Under ordinary circumstances, the firemen ought to be under a great deal of urgency & perhaps even jittery. However, the firemen were so well mannered they saluted Mr Barclay and even removed their hats. Rather than the firemen moving around with urgency and meting out orders to the people, they exhibited a certain degree of calmness by being very formal with Mr. Barclay.
<u>This is a parody to depict the good mannerism and extreme formality associated with the British society evidenced by the firemen removing their hats and greeting Mr Barclay very calmly despite the raging fire</u>
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Hence, option A is the correct answer
Answer:
From what I recall of that story, probably true.
Explanation:
Answer:
A. He had a right to vote for the candidate he believed in.
Explanation:
As given in the question, the word "right" has so many meanings out of which one is "to be legally and morally entitled". And in this sense, we can safely say that the sentence we are supposed to get among the given options will contain the right meaning as given in the question.
Among the four given options, the sentence that contains the correct answer for the<em> "morally and legally entitled"</em> meaning for the word "<em>right</em>" is the first sentence. In this sentence, the <em>"right to vote for the candidate he believed in"</em> is a <em>"legal and moral right"</em> that an individual is endowed or have access to which no one can take away.
So, the <u>correct answer is option A.</u>