This question is missing the previous part of the excerpt and the answer options. I have found the complete question online. The part that you already posted will be omitted, replaced with . . .
Read the following excerpt from Levitt and Dubner's "Freakonomics":
In the real world, Feldman learned to settle for less than 95 percent. He came to consider a company as "honest" if its payment rate was above 90 percent. He considered a rate between 80 and 90 percent "annoying but tolerable." If a company habitually paid below 80 percent, Feldman might post a hectoring note, like this one:
. . .
A. a claim
B. an example
C. a conclusion
D. a counterclaim
Answer:
The excerpt serves a:
B. an example
Explanation:
The excerpt in the question serves as an example for the passage posted above.
Feldman is a man who leaves baskets with bagels at companies for people to take them and pay for them. He does not stay at the company, however, to make sure people will pay. He would rather trust their honesty. But, if people begin to take the bagels without paying to the point where Feldman only makes between 80 to 90 percent of the money he should make, he leaves them a note.
When the authors talk about Feldman's note, the phrase "like this one" shows that the excerpt is an example of a type of note Feldman might use to increase payment by appealing to people's honesty.
First, it is spelled servile. Second, here is your sentence!
The boy was servile and weak, intolerably vain and ambitious.
Answer:
A country called "Fast Food Nation" is called that because it eats a lot of fast food. Eric Schlosser's book isn't just about fast food. It also talks about how it affects society in the United States and other countries now that it's been around for so long, and how it affects people there. These facts by Schlosser have had an impact on not just the people who read them, but also the whole world. After years of research and analysis, his facts are based on the truth. They are so well-researched that no reader will have any doubts about fast food companies or their policies after reading them.
When "Fast Food Nation" came out in 2001, it was a big hit. You might want to put the fries on hold after you read "Fast Food Nation." The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania published an article in their online business analysis journal, Knowledge at Wharton, about why. This article used statistics from "Fast Food Nation" to support their argument that we should all try to eat less fast food. Soon after, The Guardian wrote a summary of Eric Schlosser's book "Fast Food Nation." People read this article because it sums up his main ideas and presents them in a way that shows "the painful truth about fast food." This helps people understand the book better. Both of these papers agree with Schosser's idea that fast food is bad for us and that we should not eat it.
Eric Schlosser talked about his book with PR Watch in 2006. Obesity, children, and fast-food public relations were his main points of interest. He discusses obesity and how fast food has impacted it in America. One of his main themes is that unhealthy fast food has made it easier for kids to gain weight. Public relations have helped fast food restaurants attract children. According to Schlosser, sights and colors may entice children to try new things. This interview and his book will make anyone who reads them want to improve their parenting skills.
As we've shown, the problem is global, but the majority of fast-food chains are American, and they started here. In 2009, Schlosser spoke to PBS about "the state of the American food system." In this interview, he discusses the impact of his narrative on the fast-food industry and the American fast-food industry as a whole. Years later, Schlosser spoke to the Daily Beast about "In Still a Fast-Food Nation: Eric Schlosser Reflects on 10 Years Later." Now more than ever, Schlosser argues, people should read his book and learn about the terrible consequences of fast food on our lives.
"Fast Food Nation" by Eric Schlosser was relevant in 2001. It was still relevant in 2022 and will be in 2100. The fast-food industry harms our collective health. We should try to remember all the facts in "Fast Food Nation" for the next time we pass a fast-food joint.
Explanation:
Change some words to avoid plagiarism. :)
Answer-
TO INFORM:
A nutritional label on a juice carton
A city event calendar
Baseball results
The need for daylight savings time
To persuade:
Ten reasons to exercise
Why music is so important
Explanation:
To persuade means to try to get someone to do something. so you would provide reasoning in your statement
To inform is to state facts or tell actual information.
Hope that helped :)