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Stolb23 [73]
3 years ago
6

In order to infer a theme from a story one must identify the central ___ and its __

English
2 answers:
vichka [17]3 years ago
5 0
Idea and it's intelligence
malfutka [58]3 years ago
4 0
Central claim? And it's....
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In “The First Seven Years” by Bernard Malamud, how is the climax of the story also an epiphany for Feld?
Ivanshal [37]

<u>Answer</u>:

In “The First Seven Years” by Bernard Malamud the climax of the story is also an epiphany for Feld because Feld’s confrontation with Sobel makes him to realize he wanted the wrong things for Miriam. So, the correct option is Option C.

<u>Explanation</u>:

Feld’s epiphany is where he realises the importance of allowing Miriam take her own decisions than just imposing his wishes on her. Feld always wants his daughter to have a better life than what he led but he also thinks that she needs to make choices that will make her happy as well. This is also the climax for the story as it makes a break point in the history line. Here, the protagonist understands that Miriam will not be happy with what he wants for her and agrees to let her marry Sobel.

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3 years ago
What insight do we get into Curley's wife's way of life? Do you have newfound sympathy for her?
Sauron [17]

Answer:

From the beginning it was his intention to have her killed by Lennie.

Explanation:

. From the beginning it was his intention to have her killed by Lennie. Lennie has to do something terrible and unforgivable in order for George to decide to shoot him. This is what the story is about: a man kills his best friend out of compassion. Naturally we feel sorry for Curley's wife--but Steinbeck doesn't want us to feel too sorry for her because that would make us feel less sorry for Lennie as well as for George. Steinbeck inserted that memorable scene in which the girl frightens and humiliates Crooks in order to make her seem somewhat less sympathetic. Otherwise she is just an unfortunate, unhappy, very young girl who is an innocent victim of Curley, Lennie, and an underprivileged background. Steinbeck was trying to make the girl seem like a real person, trying to make her sympathetic but not too sympathetic, cruel but not too cruel, immoral but not too immoral. He did not want her to steal the spotlight from Lennie. If we feel too sorry for Curley's wife when she is killed, then we won't feel sufficiently sorry for Lennie when he gets killed; we would feel that he got just what he deserved. That would spoil Steinbeck's great dramatic ending, which was what he was aiming for from the time he wrote the first sentence of his book. Of Mice and Men is George and Lennie's story.

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3 years ago
A student is writing an argumentative article for class and wants to revise it to add supporting evidence. Read the paragraph fr
zepelin [54]

Answer:

c because it explains the question more it has keywords

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3 years ago
Help me I need this in 2 hours!!!
Minchanka [31]

Answer:

When will we learn the lesson that the government’s response to prohibit products doesn’t work? Just as alcohol prohibition provoked thousands of alcohol-related poisonings from bootleggers and the recent reductions in opioid prescriptions increased heroin overdose deaths, removing e-cigarette flavors from the regulated market, as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is poised to do very soon, poses a grave risk to public health.

We’ve already seen several local governments attempting to curb vaping with similar regulation. Cities throughout the nation are considering banning all e-cigarettes and vaping devices or raising the legal age for purchase to 21. And with the FDA piling on, the assault on vapes has never been so heavy.

But any of these bans would end in catastrophe.

It’s true: e-cigarettes aren’t harmless. Research shows they’re much safer than conventional cigarettes and a welcomed innovation, but it will take decades to determine the long-term consequences of e-cigarette use. And with over 27 percent of teens now reporting that they vape e-cigarettes at least once a month, local governments and the FDA are understandably concerned about their health. Almost all adult nicotine use is preceded by adolescent use, and the recent trend could re-popularize nicotine across the country after decades of a shrinking market. E-cigarette use among youth dropped in 2016, but that trend has been heavily reversed with the recent popularization of Juul e-cigarettes.

But the larger point still stands — market restrictions on popular substances frequently lead to more deaths.

The recently reported vaping-related respiratory illnesses are currently incredibly rare — there have been millions of e-cigarette users over the past decade and only 31 reported deaths. And those deaths likely have nothing to do with legal nicotine e-cigarette products. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reviewed 514 of the 1,299 current case patients and found that at least 76 percent of the vaping-related respiratory illnesses were caused by contaminants in black-market marijuana products. Another study published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that 84 percent of the lung-injury patients in Wisconsin and Illinois also reported vaping THC.

And if the FDA succeeds in pushing nicotine flavors to the black market, a poisoning problem currently absent of nicotine products will become chronic. The previous FDA director Scott Gottlieb acknowledged in a CNBC interview that “It’s very difficult right now because there’s different problems: there’s the teen use of e-cigarettes and there’s these acute lung injuries. And if we conflate the two and we pull the legally sold e-cigarette products off the market, it’s going to increase the market for the illegal products.”

It’s important to note, flavors aren’t the primary reason teens are vaping. Teens who vape do prefer flavors, just like adults, but the advent of safer tobacco alternatives would attract some young people, regardless of flavors. Underage tobacco use was endemic before vaping, which reveals that the failure to enforce current laws — not the existence of products ­— is primarily why underage use exists.

And vaping is likely why even fewer teens are smoking cigarettes. This year’s jump in teen vaping was also accompanied by a nearly 30 percent reduction in teen smoking — the largest decline in decades — and teen smoking is now at its lowest rate of all time at 5.8 percent.

The FDA is in a difficult position, but we need to make sure adult smokers have access to safer alternatives. The BMJ published a study showing that if every conventional cigarette smoker in the U.S. switched to e-cigarettes, 6.6 million fewer current smokers would die premature deaths. Banning flavors would interfere with everyone who’s attempting to quit combustible cigarettes, and would likely only reduce teen vaping as much as the ban would reduce adult vaping. Another report in The BMJ predicts that a flavor ban would reduce vaping by 11.1 percent, but would also increase conventional smoking by 8.3 percent — a terrible trade-off.

Another “solution” — increasing the minimum age to purchase e-cigarettes from 18 to 21 across the country — would largely prevent 18-year-old high school seniors from purchasing e-cigarettes for their younger classmates and also reduce youth e-cigarette use. But again, we’d then be preventing many young adults from accessing the most effective tool to quit smoking the significantly more dangerous combustible cigarettes.

Reducing teen vaping should certainly be a goal of both cities and the FDA. But prohibition of e-cigarettes is likely to increase smoking in teens and adults — and also increase black-market use and poisonings from (newly) illegal e-cigarette products. Why do it? Instead, the goal should be to teach teens not to vape. Then adults struggling with addiction can successfully quit smoking, and more lives won’t be put at risk for no real reason

7 0
3 years ago
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