For 1 Part A, the answer is:
<span>persuade readers that babies are born without a tendency to show prejudice.
For Part B:
</span><span>We can put our faith in young people as a positive force.
For 2:
</span><span>The government should encourage teachers to promote tolerance.
For 3:
She appeals to the readers by convincing us that what she desires is possible simply by stating it:
</span>It is possible for all of us to work on this—at home, in our schools, at our jobs.
It is possible to work on human relationships in every area of our lives.
<span>C. I, II, and IV
</span><span>I. “My best friend and I knew that we were going to grow up to be ugly.”
</span>
II. “First, our heads got large, but our necks wavered, frail as crisp tulips.”
IV. “My gangly arms nearly touched my kneecaps.”
Answer:
There is no passage to link the answer to, but definitions of asnwers can help
Explanation:
Here are definitions of the answers, which can help with the answer:
A) Humorous means funny or amusing.
B) Conversational is something related to conversation, which can be chatty, friendly, colloquial.
C) Irony is the expression of someone's meaning by using language that represents the opposite, typically for humorous effect.
D) Satire is the use of humour, irony, or exaggeration, criticize people's stupidity or vices, particularly in the context of important and general issues.
E) Condensending means having or showing a patronizing attitude towards someone.
Sam and Eric are twins. Though they are two individuals, they are identified as one with the nickname "Samneric".
Their companions can't tell them apart so instead of using their names, their friends combined their names and used it to address any one of the twins.
Samneric do things together. They think alike. Basically, they are identical in all ways from physical appearance to their characters.
Answer:
compound
Explanation:
the first clause is linked with the second one using the coordinator "but", which form a compound sentence.