Answer:
D. It characterizes the County Attorney as someone desirous of showing respect to women, even if he does not mean it.
Explanation:
In the play "Triffles," by Susan Glaspell, the Country Attorney is described as a man who gives polite attention or respect to women. However, in the play he does not give importance to what women thought and felt. In fact, it is a male-dominate society in which the men consider that a kitchen contains unsignificant elements or "triffles." However, the items found actually provide the evidence for the women to solve the case.
Answer:
Us
Explanation:
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° • .°• ✯ ★ * ° °· . • ° ★ • ☄▁▂▃▄▅▆▇▇▆▅▄▃▁▂
Answer:
C)
Explanation:
By the second sentence, we can tell that Lydia may look disheveled, but to the narrator, she seemed elegantly in her element. To most people, when someone gets out of the water their hair is all over the place and they look tired and with wrinkly clothes. To the narrator Lydia was different, they describe her as being one with the ocean. To the narrator this bond with the ocean makes gives her a type of elegance when she is close to it and/or comes out of the water.
<span>"So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure—the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking [it]...is a fairly easy engineering feat."
This example maintains the main idea of the passage, keeping its message in tact while eliminating information using ellipses to improve clarity. The addition of "it" also helps make it clearer and more concise. </span>