Answer:
I think That charlie is justified for stealing food because he needed it but it still
isnt something we should do every day
Explanation:
Answer:
True. Homer uses irony in Menelaus's speaking with Helen about her history.
Explanation:
In Book 2 of "The Odyssey", Telemachus had arrived at the kingdom of Sparta and was staying with Menelaus. There, during dinner, they converse on the bravery of Odysseus and Menelaus and Helen began telling of stories about their knowledge of him. Helen expresses her praise for Odysseus and said that while she was in Troy as the wife of Paris, she had seen through the disguise of Odysseus but she did not report him to the Trojans as she misses her home and husband. This was responded by Menelaus as being "quite a tale". In this discourse between husband and wife, Homer uses irony and sarcasm.
Answer:
When she takes the lamb leg out of the deep freeze because in the beginning they show that she’s a bit unstable then it's shown that she receives devastating news from her husband; they describe the lamb leg a lot so by then I saw where this was going.
Explanation:
<u>At the flat Tom rented for Myrtle, their neighbor Mr. McKee discussed </u><u>aspects of his photography business and techniques</u>. <em>(...) They arrive at Tom and Myrtle’s city apartment, and Nick proceeds to get drunk. Myrtle calls up her cute sister, Catherine, and their neighbors, the McKees, and invites them over. Mrs. McKee tells Myrtle that her dress looks wonderful on her. Mrs. McKee tells her husband, who’s a professional photographer, that he should take pictures of Myrtle (...).</em>
The novel (The Great Gatsby was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald) recounts the chaos of the First World War. American society lives an unprecedented level of prosperity. At the same time, the prohibition on the production/consumption of alcoholic beverages made a large number of millionaires outside the commodity sale circuit and provoked an increase in organized crime. The 1925 story takes place in New York and in the city of Long Island during the summer of 1922.