The answer to this question is hidden within the question
itself. How so? Well, first we need to be aware of what
satire is. What is satire? Satire is when an author pokes fun of (almost
mockingly) the element of a government that the author deems a flaw, failure,
or weakness. It doesn’t necessarily need
to be humorous because humor is subjective, and so for every 10 people who find
something funny, there are 10 other people who find the same thing not
funny. As such, satire is best determined
to be scorn. That said, because we know
satire is scorn for the government, the question is almost self answering in
that satire exists within “Top of the Food Chain” because of how he scorns the
government.
Answer:
It is a peculiar fact that in the average picture theatre you will hear a ... the picture, and note that I say “picture repertoire,” for many musical publications have no value ... when it is done to shade or otherwise work out a given theme, and so we come ... they usually being of more advanced thought and should receive a higher
Explanation:
Ode to Autumn is an unconventional appreciation of the autumn season. John Keats personified the season of autumn as a young maiden where i<span>t is understood that maturity and ripeness as one with the old age </span><span>when he mentioned it in this line:
"Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness! / Close bosom friend of the maturing sun".
</span>
Answer:
a bar that slides to lock something
Explanation:
They are told to close something most likely a window and when you close something you usually must lock it
The answer is Caesar won’t read Artemidorus’ letter, which means Artemidorus cannot stop Caesar’s fate: his assassination.