Hi. You did not present the text and answer options that this question refers to. This makes it impossible for your question to be answered. However, when searching for your question on the internet, I found a question very similar to yours, which featured an excerpt from the novel "Iqbal ." This excerpt presents a dirty, inhospitable, unhappiness and suffocating setting, which is the place where Iqbal had to live together with other slave children. If this is your case, I hope the answer below will help you.
Answer:
According to the setting, we can have inferences that the story will be unpleasant, slow and dirty.
Explanation:
"Iqbal" is a book written by Francesco D'Adamo. This book presents the life of Iqbal, a boy who was forced to live as a slave in a carpet factory along with other children. All the children were crammed into a dirty, fetid, insect-filled, inhospitable cubicle. The setting shows how uncomfortable, unharmonious, suffocating and inappropriate this place was. The actions that take place in this place are slow and unhappiness, which makes the reader realize that this will be an unpleasant, slow and dirty story.
Answer:
B). Postman argues that television commercials do not use language or "tests of truth" to viewers decide whether to buy a product. Instead, they rely on images to create an emotional appeal that influences consumers' decisions.
Explanation:
The second option from the given options is not plagiarised as it paraphrases the ideas presented in the paragraph and acknowledges the author i.e. 'Neil Postman' when it says 'Postman argues.' It restates the meaning of the passage using different words that help in preventing plagiarism. The other options represent Postman's language as well as ideas without paraphrasing and acknowledgment or citation of the source that eventually plagiarizes them. Thus, <u>option B</u> is the correct answer.
Answer:
he feels nervous going to war
Mark can <u>use quotes from any book in his review</u> because it is allowed under <u>fair use</u>
Fair use allows for the critique of art but does not allow for large chunks of a book to be copied. Fair use also applies to motion picture media, as long as significant portions of the movie is not shown (but rather short clips instead).