The figurative language being used in the passage is an
example of Jargon. It is because based on the passage, the priest made use of
religious terms in his everyday speaking habit that made it to be hard for a
normal person to do so without any religious background in which Jargon is
being defined as a characteristic language in which is used by a particular or
specific group.
To support the claim Orwell provides a hypothetical situation with someone using unclear language, as shown in the second answer option.
<h3>What is a hypothetical situation?</h3>
- An invented situation.
- A situation that does not exist in real life.
Orwell wanted to show how people defend questionable behavior with difficult language, without objectivity, and with little clarity. This ends up confusing citizens and leading them to defend situations they cannot understand.
Learn more about George Orwell at the link:
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Recycle brings up the image of shredded paper, chipped wood so it's use to recycle clothes may not lend itself to the best use for the word clothes.
I love the word "repurpose" for clothes or furniture. One can turn it into something else, such as using an old T-shirt to make a pillow or a dresser drawer to make a shelf. It's being given a new use with a new purpose.
B.
common, concrete, neither, countable
I had read Judy Blume books before but I would probably go with the first one I hoped I helped