Answer:
- The tools such as bits, reins, halters, knives, and whips symbolize the oppression of the working class under the tsar.
Explanation:
Each one of those devices represent to the vehicle of the dictatorship to have the people under their control. The viciousness, the consistent compromise of their lives. It speaks to the absence of decisions the common laborers had under the tsar' regime.
The question belongs to this passage from chapter 2 of Animal Farm:
<em> The harness-room at the end of the stables was broken open; the bits, the nose-rings, the dog-chains, the cruel knives with which Mr. Jones had been used to castrate the pigs and lambs, were all flung down the well. The reins, the halters, the blinkers, the degrading nosebags, were thrown on to the rubbish fire which was burning in the yard. So were the whips. All the animals capered with joy when they saw the whips going up in flames.</em>
Answer:
The answer is B
Explanation:
The question seems too obvious
also i got it right
Answer:
parents were crying after what happened to the victims that where hurt and many people had to go to the hospital some even dead.the people now started to protest to the government to make safer laws sop people wont get hur like that again. The student were so spooked that some went into a coma and others never can talk again
Explanation:
you also did not give me the massacre
Answer:
<u>1. Did swallow know that helping the happy prince for too long its life will be jeopardized?</u>
<em>Yes</em>.
<u>2. Why did the swallow still choose to help?</u>
<em> It's because the swallow helped the Happy Prince by distributing precious stones and gold leaves that decorated his body.</em>
Answer: 2 and 5
Explanation: Part 1 is only a description of the action, and parts 3 and 4 introduce details from the character's past that enrich the narrative, but don't build anticipation. Part 2 introduces some anticipation in the last words "...he lay perfectly quiet and listened," which evokes in the reader a feeling of expectation for a relevant piece of auditory information. Part 5 has an even more intense effect, concentrated in the words "...he might never know again," which project an ominous feeling that events are about to unfold in the character's life.