The context clues show that the misdirection was easier to detect because Ecker used information that was biased.
<h3>What are context clues?</h3>
Context clues are the hints that are given in a literary work. The context clues are important for the readers to understand a story.
In this case, context clues show that the misdirection was easier to detect because Ecker used information that was biased.
Learn more about context clues on:
brainly.com/question/1330487
1. I believe the correct answer is:
social status.
In these lines from the play “The
Importance of Being Earnest”, written by Oscar Wild, Gwendolen Fairfax says
that people who live in the country lack social status.
Gwendelon is a big-city (London in this
case), sophisticated woman who views the world with the shortsightedness of the
aristocratic society of Victorian era, which Oscar Wilde tend to critic.
Limited by her installed aristocratic norms, Gwendelon says that she can’t
grasp the idea that someone of importance can live in the country (“how anybody
manages to exist in the country, if anybody who is anybody does.”) as the
country lacks the social status, which is reserved for the big cities.
2. I believe the correct answer is:
morally debased.
In these lines from the play “The
Importance of Being Earnest”, written by Oscar Wild, Cecily indicates that
people in the city are morally debased.
Cecily Cardew is the foil character,
contrast, of the Gwendelon Fairfox, which we can see in her protectiveness of
the country life, both its setting and people. She replays to Gwendelons
comments of the lack of social status in country life by calling people in the
city “agricultural depressed”, meaning that their decrease in moral value
spread like and illness, almost like an epidemic even.
The answer is A because it is coming directly from the person that experienced it