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Elanso [62]
3 years ago
13

Read the passage.

English
1 answer:
Temka [501]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

5

Explanation:

The first sentence introduces the paragraph; there's nothing out of order there. The second sentence expands upon the first idea, and the third and fourth sentence continue talking about his consistency. Only the fifth sentence has a slightly different topic; it is therefore out of order. :)

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Why and how was Echo punished by Hera
Alenkasestr [34]

Answer:

Echo was turned into an echo.

"When Hera tore into the woods after Zeus, Echo sidetracked her with chatter and gossip. For some time, this worked well for Zeus. When Hera figured out what was going on, she punished Echo by denying her much of her beautiful voice. All Echo could do forever after was repeat the last few sounds she heard. " - Lone wolf online

Explanation:

Hope I helped! :)

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Go ...... the building and turn left. (into/up/off/out of)​
saveliy_v [14]

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How are the 'black' characters portrayed in The Princess and the Frog "Mama Odie" song?
Mumz [18]

Answer:

Thank goodness I watched this a million times <3

When Mama Odie says "dont matter what ya' look like, dont matter what ya' wear" That was inferring that no matter how you look, no matter you skin color or clothing choice you are still special in your own way weather someone else sees or not.

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3 years ago
Match these words with their correct definition.
earnstyle [38]

Answer:

1.Quarried
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3.Granite

<em>Hope it helps...</em>

5 0
2 years ago
ILL MARK YOU BRAINLIEST.
astra-53 [7]

Answer:

Despite the initial difficulties inherent in using farming tools designed for humans, the animals cooperate to finish the harvest — and do so in less time than it had taken Jones and his men to do the same. Boxer distinguishes himself as a strong, tireless worker, admired by all the animals. The pigs become the supervisors and directors of the animal workers. On Sundays, the animals meet in the big barn to listen to Snowball and Napoleon debate a number of topics on which they seem never to agree. Snowball forms a number of Animal Committees, all of which fail. However, he does prove successful at bringing a degree of literacy to the animals, who learn to read according to their varied intelligences. To help the animals understand the general precepts of Animalism, Snowball reduces the Seven Commandments to a single slogan: "Four legs good, two legs bad." Napoleon, meanwhile, focuses his energy on educating the youth and takes the infant pups of Jessie and Bluebell away from their mothers, presumably for educational purposes.

The animals learn that the cows' milk and windfallen apples are mixed every day into the pigs' mash. When the animals object, Squealer explains that the pigs need the milk and apples to sustain themselves as they work for the benefit of all the other animals.

Analysis

While the successful harvest seems to signal the overall triumph of the rebellion, Orwell hints in numerous ways that the very ideals that the rebels used as their rallying cry are being betrayed by the pigs. The fact that they do not do any physical work but instead stand behind the horses shouting commands suggests their new positions as masters — and as creatures very much like the humans they presumably wanted tooverthrow.

When Squealer explains to the animals why the pigs have been getting all the milk and apples, he reveals his rhetorical skill and ability to "skip from side to side" to convince the animals that the pigs' greed is actually a great sacrifice: Appealing to science (which presumably has proven that apples and milk are "absolutely necessary to the well-being of a pig") and lying about pigs disliking the very food they are hoarding, Squealer manages a great public-relations stunt by portraying the pigs as near-martyrs who only think of others and never themselves. "It is for your sake that we drink that milk and eat those apples," Squealer explains, and his dazzling pseudo-logic persuades the murmuring animals that the pigs are, in fact, selfless.

Squealer's rhetorical question, "Surely there is no one among you who wants to see Jones back?" is the first of many times when Squealer will invoke the name of Jones to convince the animals that — despite any discontentment they may feel — their present lives are greatly preferable to the ones they led under their old master. Orwell's tone when describing the animals' reaction to Squealer ("The importance of keeping the pigs in good health was all too obvious") is markedly ironic and again signals to the reader that the pigs are slowly changing into a new form of their old oppressors.

Explanation:

That's the passage! You can look through that for the answer pls mark brainliest please

8 0
3 years ago
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