Answer: I guess its a way to count down for a race in the mid 1800s
Explanation:
One for the money, two for the show is half of a rhyme used as a countdown to begin a task. The entire rhyme is: one for the money, two for the show, three to make ready and four to go. Children have used this little poem since the mid-1800s as a countdown to starting a race or competition.
A dead deer in the middle of the road
Answer:
me:hi uncle
uncle:hi how can I help you
uncle:can you please give me samosa
me: yeah of course
uncle:how many
me :2
uncle:ok have this
me: how much price
uncle: only 20rs
me:thank you
uncle: welcome
me :bye
uncle: bye bye
Answer:
Swift writes that after much time and effort, he has finally come up with a solution that is “solid and real, of no expence and little trouble” to address the problem of poverty.
Explanation:
Jonathan Swift wrote his political as well as economical proposal "A Modest Proposal" to offer solutions to the ever increasing poverty and increase of children in the streets. in it, he proposes the idea of using the young children as sources of meat as well as income for both the rich and the poor.
Selling the children as meat to the rich will ensure the continual availability of food while it will also procure a steady flow of income for the parents in their effort of bringing the children into the world. The excerpt shows Swift coming upon a whole new proposal, one that "<em>hath something solid and real, of no expence and little trouble, full in our own power, and whereby we can incur no danger in disobliging England</em>". But all this came after he had "<em>been wearied out for many years with offering vain, idle, visionary thoughts, and at length utterly despairing of success</em>". Thus, Swift admits that after so much effort and time, he had finally arrived to a definitive solution for solving the poverty situation of Ireland, a solution that will be "<em>solid and real</em>".
Because it's late and I want to sleep, but want to help out, I'll just be doing the numbers but in the order of the sentences.
6
7
1
5
4
3
2