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koban [17]
3 years ago
10

**PLATO QUESTION, PLEASE ANSWER CORRECTLY, ONLY 1 CORRECT ANSWER, THANK YOU**

English
2 answers:
SOVA2 [1]3 years ago
5 0

I believe the correct answer is: B. Dialect.

 

<span>     The epoch of Realism (19th century) is characterized by the constant tendency of authors to show real life as vividly and convincing as it can be. This is often achieved by description of ambient to the tiniest details and characterizing characters as humanly possible.
     One of the techniques of characterization is regionalism – including dialects to represent social class, age and origin</span>
Kitty [74]3 years ago
5 0
It is B because i just got done with that question
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The answer is D. I was approached by a homeless person.
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4 years ago
Which step should you take first after viewing a commercial for a product?
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Answer:

What step should you take FIRST after viewing a commercial?

Explanation:

Well, let's get an understanding when we see a commercial for a product. It's mostly just to get you to purchase the product, getting you intrigued and probably hyping you up enough to get the product yourself in the markets, but it's not always like that for some. But, what's the first thing you should do after viewing a commercial:

Basing your final decision on the visuals used-

This is your final decision, not your starting decision on whether or not you should buy the product, I believe that it is good, but even at points the visuals aren't always the exact thing what you're gonna get if you buy it, it's probably gonna be different than what it shows on TV.

Buying the product if the commercial was funny-

No matter if it gave you a chuckle, it'll probably "try" and connect with you, it doesn't care if you enjoyed it, as long as you buy the product and use it, they only care about the income that is generated from their product.

Examining your emotional response-

What you feel about it is a good way to think about if you should get it or not, if it made you happy and excited and you believe it's a good 'want' or 'need', it's probably recommended for you. If you don't like it or you just don't feel that excited, you shouldn't really get it nor try and see if you would like it, wasting money either way.

Making a decision based on whether you like the background music

Go ahead, but this is Brainly, we have epic brains (I need help), but for real though, making a decision on the background music? That's just like saying "I like this show because of the outro music, or the intro song" and not because of what it's purpose it, mainly just to entertain or inform, if you apply that to a product, it's just not a good idea nor a good mindset to be in.

But, I believe that examining your emotional response is the way to go, it could also be by basing your final decision on the visuals, however, that's a final decision, this is the first step, which means to see how you feel about it and see if you should get it or not.

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3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Life on the Mississippi is set in a small town in the nineteenth century. How is the setting established? And how
sukhopar [10]

Answer:

Life on the Mississippi was the book that launched the now well known Samuel Clemens’ career as a “serious” author.  Clemens, more well known by the title Mark Twain, paints Mississippi steamboat living and the workings of the river itself as a tribute to that great river.  Twain uses this novel as a combination of an autobiography of his early days as a steamboats man, and a collection of anecdotes about the people who made their living both along the great river and on it.  It was from this work that the novel Huckleberry Finn would emerge, using the raw material to set the backdrop for this work which is considered Twain’s greatest novel.  Mark Twain spent most of his early life in Hannibal, Missouri, the Mississippi river town that first gave him a taste of what it was like to live the life of a steamboat man.  It was there that he was bitten by the bug of becoming a steamboat pilot, though that lay dormant for a time before he finally acted on it.  Before Twain could pursue his passion on the steam boat, his father died, and he became apprenticed to a printer and began to write for his brother’s newspaper.  It was in 1857, ten years after his father’s death, and after having begun work in many eastern cities as a printer, that Twain decided to go seek his fortune in South America.  Before he could make it there, however, he had to go through the major port city of New Orleans.  It was here in New Orleans that Twain decided to give up his possible fortune in South America and pursue his first and foremost passion, becoming a steamboat captain.  This part of Mark Twain’s life had a huge impact on his greatest writing, and it was in this time that he obtained the material he needed to write Life on the Mississippi.  Reading through the book, it is obvious how much respect Twain has for the river itself.  This is evident through the ways in which he describes its incredible size, and at the same time its minute complexities.  His detailed descriptions and picturesque use of language within Life on the Mississippi serve to prove to Twain’s audience that he is indeed a serious and well spoken author.  It is obvious that Twain affinity for the river itself is the source and backbone of this book, while Twain also manages to bring out the eccentricities of not only the river, but also of the people who populate it.  These stories of workers, farmers, and steamboat captains serve to bring the novel alive for the audience.  As I have stated earlier, this also allows for a great deal of background for his novel Huckleberry Finn.  It is in this novel, considered his greatest of all time, that Twain gains the admiration and awe of people around the globe, and without the raw material of Life on the Mississippi, he would not have what he needed to make this novel what it was.  Thus, he began his career as a novelist with this novel, and he reached his peak as well through this novel, gaining him more recognition as an author than the vast majority of all American authors, and than authors throughout the world.

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Answer:

<u>He sought more to give himself dignity and weight by calling himself, in addition to "Collegiate Assessor," "Major."</u>

Explanation:

Major Kovalev from the short story "The Nose" by Nikolai Gogol is an arrogant and self-absorbed man. This is shown throughout the story in various ways. One example is the fact that he calls himself "Major" in addition to calling himself "Collegiate Assessor." This shows that he wants to appear important to people.

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3 years ago
I need 4 sentences with that and which​
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Answer:

Do they have to be related, like in a paragraph?

Explanation:

If not:

The subject in school which I hate the most in school is la. That dog over there looks funny. Between blue and purple, which is your favorite color? That word is spelled incorrectly.

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3 years ago
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