Answer:
D. B,C,A,D
Explanation:
Option D is the correct answer.
Looking at the given sentences, one will discover that Sentence B is actually the best to begin the conclusion. Having presented the meaning of learning a new word, then the next is to revel the benefit of learning new words. This is seen in Sentence C.
Sentence A and D then states the long-term and short-term benefits of learning new words.
if you are referring to the excerpt that goes "Where four decades ago there was rubble, today in West Berlin there is the greatest industrial output of any city in Germany—busy office blocks, fine homes and apartments, proud avenues, and the spreading lawns of park land. Where a city's culture seemed to have been destroyed, today there are two great universities, orchestras and an opera, countless theaters, and museums. Where there was want, today there's abundance. . . . From devastation, from utter ruin, you Berliners have, in freedom, rebuilt a city that once again ranks as one of the greatest on earth. . . .
In the 1950s, Khrushchev predicted: "We will bury you." But in the West today, we see a free world that has achieved a level of prosperity and well-being unprecedented in all human history. In the Communist world, we see failure, technological backwardness, declining standards of health, even want of the most basic kind—too little food. Even today, the Soviet Union still cannot feed itself. After these four decades, then, there stands before the entire world one great and inescapable conclusion: Freedom leads to prosperity. Freedom replaces the ancient hatreds among the nations with comity and peace. Freedom is the victor."
The answer is C. Democracy leads to greater prosperity than Communism does.
1- The correct answer is A.
In "Odes to the Season," Blake personify summer as a man riding through the valley.
It can be inferred from lines such as "O thou, who passest thro' our vallies," and "Sit down, and in our mossy vallies, on some bank beside a river clear, throw thy silk draperies off."
2- The correct answer is B.
The poem which uses sensory imagery to convey that humans suffer from not recognizing "nature's holy plan" is "Lines Written in Early Spring," by Wiliam Wordsworth.
Examples of this sensory -in this case <em>visual</em>- images are:
"Through primrose tufts, in that green bower,
The periwinkle trailed its wreaths;"