<h3><u>Spier’s five ethical “signposts” theory:</u></h3>
1.According to the Spier’s five ethical “signposts” theory, the bakery clerk should be loyal and trustworthy. So he shouldn’t hide anything from the public and should be loyal .
2.We should be just and treat equally to all people. So he shouldn’t think only about the baker but also he should think of all the people whom the baker is cheating with.
3. We should always help other people. So the baker should also help the people from being cheated by ignoring his personal affairs.
4. We should respect autonomy. The bakery clerk can act as free agent and should only think about his genuine thoughts and opinion.
5. We shouldn’t harm to anybody. The baker clerk without physically harming the baker can ask him to stop doing adulteration.
Irony is a figure of speech in which words convey the opposite of their literal meaning or a situation is contradictory to what one would expect. So the answer would be C.
The answer is:
- repetition
- alliteration
- assonance
In the pasage from "Theme for English B," the author Langston Hughes makes use of repetition when he reproduces the words <em>and</em>, <em>hear, me, </em>and <em>you</em> several times.
He also uses alliteration, which is the evident repetition of identical consonant sounds in nearby syllables. For example, <em>true </em>and <em>twenty-two</em>, as well as <em>hear </em>and <em>Harlem. </em>
Finally, Hughes also employs assonance, which is the resemblance in vowel sounds among syllables and words. For instance, <em>true, two, you</em> and <em>too</em>; and <em>feel, see </em>and <em>we</em>.