Your answer for this question would be the second option because in a poem worldly possessions is where you control and mess up the language. Hope I helped (:
The correct answers are A. A magazine article exaggerating the public’s extreme reaction to a celebrity, B. A funny political cartoon exposing the flaws in a new government policy, and D. An ironic short story that draws attention to how unmotivated people can be
Explanation:
The purpose of satire is to criticize negative aspects of individuals, society or government, for this, satire does not use literal language but relies on irony, humor or exaggeration that show indirectly the absurdity of some behaviors and actions. This also implies texts that use literal language and do not focus on criticizing society are not satirical.
According to this, from the options provided the texts that are example of satire are "A magazine article exaggerating the public’s extreme reaction to a celebrity" because this uses exaggeration to show a negative aspect of people and create a critique; "A funny political cartoon exposing the flaws in a new government policy" because this exposes the flaws of government through humor; and "An ironic short story that draws attention to how unmotivated people can be" because as other examples this focuses on showing flaws or vices by using humor.
Answer:
Concern for how the court would look all look after having wrongly executed people.
When writers alter words in a direct quotation<span>, square </span>brackets<span>—[ ]—are placed around the change. The </span>brackets<span>, always used in pairs, enclose words intended to clarify meaning, provide a brief explanation, or to help integrate the </span>quote<span> into the writer's sentence.</span>