This question is missing the previous part of the excerpt and the answer options. I have found the complete question online. The part that you already posted will be omitted, replaced with . . .
Read the following excerpt from Levitt and Dubner's "Freakonomics":
In the real world, Feldman learned to settle for less than 95 percent. He came to consider a company as "honest" if its payment rate was above 90 percent. He considered a rate between 80 and 90 percent "annoying but tolerable." If a company habitually paid below 80 percent, Feldman might post a hectoring note, like this one:
. . .
A. a claim
B. an example
C. a conclusion
D. a counterclaim
Answer:
The excerpt serves a:
B. an example
Explanation:
The excerpt in the question serves as an example for the passage posted above.
Feldman is a man who leaves baskets with bagels at companies for people to take them and pay for them. He does not stay at the company, however, to make sure people will pay. He would rather trust their honesty. But, if people begin to take the bagels without paying to the point where Feldman only makes between 80 to 90 percent of the money he should make, he leaves them a note.
When the authors talk about Feldman's note, the phrase "like this one" shows that the excerpt is an example of a type of note Feldman might use to increase payment by appealing to people's honesty.
Answer:
He is giving a speech at the white house before president clinton.
Explanation:
Keep it up
Answer:
C. The use of science fiction allows Swift to develop a theme related
to the idea of animals developing human societies.
Explanation:
Science fiction is a type of fiction that tells stories about imagined futuristic or technological advancements that create huge changes in the social and environmental structure.
Jonathan Swift uses science fiction to show how animals develop human societies. <em>Gulliver's Travels </em> are in four parts and in each part, the protagonist Lemuel Gulliver finds himself with strange animals and creatures.
In the first part, he is shipwrecked on the land of extremely small people called Lilliput. In the second part, he finds himself at Brobdingnag where giants reside. In the third part, he is in the flying island of Laputa where the people have one eye pointing inwards and the other pointing outward. Gulliver also visits Glubbdubdrib, the island of sorcerers and from there he speaks with great men from the past who were no more such as Julius Caesar.
In the fourth and final part, he visits Houyhnhnms where a race of intelligent horses live and <u>ironically they have manged to tame the evil and greedy human race of Yahoos which shows an irony in the relationship between humans and animals.</u>
Prohibitory symbol
A circle with a line or slash through it means that the selected startup disk contains a Mac operating system, but it's not a macOS that your Mac can use.
Mrs. Moreno is selfish and miserable?