Answer:
the hunter will kill you
Explanation:
i think because I am in grade 7 and this chapter is not in our book if it doesn't help you so I am very sorry about that
Yet, I think that he feels a particular sadness of the state of affairs that envelop the modern body politic, "the unknown citizen." Auden sees a collusion between business, technology, and government as having reduced the complexity of the citizenry to patterned and predictable conformity.
It’s not yours. it’s my dog!
it’s not our cat. it’s fur is black.
is it yours, jim? no, miss, it’s hers. of course it’s not mine. it’s his.
are these our coats? yes, they are.
Its D. To give the characters something to react to
Answer:
E and F.
Explanation:
The author’s primary purpose to educate children is shown in the last options as you fully underestand the tale.
"That is the very reason why we are so cautious; for if you yesterday treated us better than the Goats you have had so long, it is plain also that if others came after us, you would in the same manner prefer them to ourselves.”
It's simmilar to a fable in which you get a moral answer, a teaching of some sort. In this case, it would roughly be: "Treat everyone the same way" or the other way around: "Don't trust those who treat you better by treating anyone else wrong".
I'd choose option E because it's the moment when you start entering a cathartical moment, very useful when teaching things to children.