Equation: 67 Divided by 9.
Answer: 7.4
Answer:
Which statement is the strongest counterclaim to the claim?
The campaign for women’s suffrage had actually begun with the Great Reform Act of 1832, long before the defaced penny was created.
Many other tactics, such as letter bombings and hunger strikes, were taking place at the same time that the defaced penny was being circulated.
The extremely slow process of redefining the British political nation began in the 1820s and took many decades to fully unfold.
The defaced penny was not created until 1903, so it could not possibly represent the true beginnings of women’s suffrage.
Explanation:
Answer:
<em>C. How on Earth, Jenny thought, could the concert have already started when she had left an hour early?</em>
Explanation:
This is the answer because, it says that "Jenny thought" and if it was using a 1st person point of view it would simply say "I thought". And it also says that when "she" had left an hour early. If it was a 1st person point of view it would also simply say "I". And it couldn't be option A, because it said "we" when the sentence (if it was trying to be in third person) should've used "they".
It can't have been option B, because it says, "in my experience" and if you were writing it in first person it would have been "in their experience", or "in (name)'s experience".
It also couldn't have been option D. Simply because it says, "As for me" and uses "I" instead of they, she, he, or even their name.
To make it short, option A, B, and D, do not have the correct wording to be a third-person sentence.
So, in conclusion, the only third-person sentence is option C.
And that's my answer.
Answer:
Orwell uses satirical reversal when Napoleon and the pigs act against their stated principles.
Orwell uses verbal irony when Animal Farm takes on its original name, The Manor Farm.
Explanation:
Satirical techniques are those language techniques used by writers to make their stories or characters seem more or less of what they are and also present an image of what they are like. They may include elements such as irony, hyperbole, exaggeration, ,etc.
In the allegorical novel <em>Animal Farm</em>, George Orwell employs this technique to satirize the abuse of language and how it has been used to show an abuse of power. This is achieved through the <u>satirical reversal of roles or ideals where Napoleon and his 'follower' pigs act against their very own stated principles</u>. Moreover, he uses <u>verbal irony to bring about the name of the farm as Animal Farm from the original name of Manor Farm</u>. These two instances prove that the abuse of language is also part of the abuse of power.