Answer:
I was reminded of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 a day or two ago while reading Ian Bogost on Apple’s Airpods. Bogost examined Airpods’ potential long term social consequences. “Human focus, already ambiguously cleft between world and screen,” he suggests, “will become split again, even when maintaining eye contact.” A little further on, he writes, “Everyone will exist in an ambiguous state between public engagement with a room or space and private retreat into devices or media.”
The answer for this question would be YES. Yes, a crowded stage is full of supernumeraries. If we understand the word supernumeraries, this means a crowded stage has an over (super) number of people (numeraries). Hope this answers your question. Have a great day!
Aung san suu Kyi started campaigning for freedom and democracy because she was against dictatorship. Her word choice and tone affects her overall meaning.
In this song, Dylan repeats the lines "Take the rag away from your face / Now ain't the time for your tears."
He uses these lines throughout the song in order to tell the listener that *this* isn't what they should be upset about. Don't get upset that this woman was murdered. Don't get upset that she was only a maid. Now isn't the time to get upset about these things.
By the end of the song, however, this line changes. It now becomes "Bury the rag deep in your face/ For now's the time for your tears." Dylan says that now is the time to cry because justice was not served. Zanzinger only got six months for the murder of an innocent woman.
Therefore, the repetition of these lines allows Dylan to indicate the true tragedy of this story.
Answers:
1) The car, which took Miah months of saving money to buy, is parked in the garage.
2)The bicycle that Kameron has had since he was ten years old is still in great shape.
4) Sierra met the boy whose parents had recently opened the restaurant doors across the street.