The interaction portrayed above between George and Hazel develops Kurt Voonegut's social criticism through the 'forgetting' of the sad things that were portrayed in the television. The attempt to forget sad things was a root of social criticism because they should not be ignored and they can be important to in someone's life.
Answer:
The figurative language found in 6 and 7 in personification.
Explanation:
The following are metaphors:
8. A temple of heat.
1. A saturated meadow,
16. That tinged the atmosphere
False. I think it would be biased about the group.
I think the answer is the first one, the workshop was not a pleasant environment for the children
I think this because in the excerpt it’s talking about how normally they don’t have a big breakfast, she wasn’t talking in her normal nasty voice, they would’ve be chained to their looms etc so it’s basically saying normally this place is a dark and not an enjoyable place for them but that day was for some reason was different. But you can infer that it wasn’t a pleasant environment for them by what goes on for them normally.
I disagree: the words you read are interpretations from the writer. The writer is explaining the beauty THEY see through their OWN vocab. When you look at a picture your brain tells you what is beautiful to you and you interpret the beauty in a picture in your own way.