"the price for an item is too high" - not a noun phrase. Actually, this is a clause, as it has a predicate of its own.
"a bottle of water while strolling" - not a noun phrase. "A bottle of water" would be a noun phrase (a phrase that has a noun as a headword), but "while strolling" is an adverbial phrase that describes the verb "buy".
"The same brand of bottled water" - noun phrase. The headword is "brand", and all the other words cling to it and provide additional explanation.
"a pair of athletic shoes" - noun phrase. The headword is "pair".
They used to set up a little camp area where the people would stay and then they would try to convert people from whatever religion they were to become their religion. The priests would usually give speeches and they had people tell others about the speech.
Occurs that he will never see that person again throughout eternity, either in the flesh or in the hereafter. ... The man is in such sadness, that the repeating words of the Raven, ... What does the phrase "nevermore" mean in "The Raven"?
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Remark
What huck sees and how he interprets it is what this short comment is about. I would pick
<em>Despite his lack of formal upbringing, Huck has good intuition when it comes to reading situations.</em>
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Yes, he exaggerates some, but the exaggeration does nothing to distort what he's looking at.
He doesn't always look for humor and sometimes he just plain wrong. I think it's Chapter 16 where Jim talks about the value of children and concludes that Solomon was not as wise as he was made out to be. Jim's insightful analysis is way above Huck's head and the passage is neither funny nor Jim's analysis exaggerated.
How do the fallacies in the first passage differ from the fallacies in the second?
Explanation:
Passage 1 contains an ad hominem attack, while passage 2 contains a false dilemma. ... Passage 1 contains an appeal to emotion, while passage 2 contains an ad hominem attack.