<em>Her beauty and ease mask a darker reality</em> is the inference that can be made about Daisy Buchanan.
Nick Carraway, the character and narrator in The Great Gatsby , is making this description of Daisy, his cousin. Nick is having dinner with Daisy and , her husband, Tom and with Jordan Baker, Daisy's beautiful friend. Nick and Daisy are having a shallow conversation about the butler ,but Daisy tells Nick she has got a secret to tell him. At that moment ,Nick observes Daisy 's beauty " a moment the last sunshine ........her glowing face" ; then he feels forced to listen to the secret: "her voice compelled me ...... I listened..." ,but ,after the butler has come back to tell Tom, secretely, he has got a telephone call, Daisy's beauty vanishes : " then the glow faded, ...... lingering regret,..". Daisy's beauty is hiding a secret or a darker reality. In fact, Tom has a lover and the phone call is from her. Daisy knows about her husband's love affair.
Hello. You forgot to enter the answer options. The options are:
"A. Change "razor thin" to "extremely tiny." B. Change "voted out of office" to "removed from their current positions." C. Change "don't have the money" to "do not make enough profit." D. Change "definitely not the way to go" to "a completely worthless idea."
Answer:
C. Change "don't have the money" to "do not make enough profit."
Explanation:
The expression "has no money" does not provide accurate and consistent information with a formal language text, when that text refers to the economic conditions of an establishment. "Not having money" is not an economic term that fits the context of the text, which should only use economic terms to maintain the formal tone of the writing.
In this case, the best way to replace this expression and provide a more formal tone would be through the expression "do not make enough profit", which justifies the statement given by the author and maintains the formal tone of the writing.
Answer:
I'm just going to give you some examples instead of writing it.
Explanation:
The address, date, and time where the incident took place.
The manager's full name and proper email address.
Your full name, address, and contact information.
The names or descriptions of any employees involved.
An attached or enclosed receipt or order number, if possible.
Information about your history as a customer in this restaurant (how long and how often you eat there).
A compliment, if possible (to help the manager hear the criticism that follows).
Specific details (for example, don't just say the place was not clean—describe the mess and say exactly what was dirty).
Tell the manager exactly what change or outcome you'd like to see.
The correct answer would be D. In addition to a claim, a well-organized support that is needed to be able to create and effective written or spoken message. When the ideas in a message are organized well, the audience would understand more the idea and what you are trying to relay.
Alleged madness
The passage from Act 3 Scene 4 has the recurring idea of alleged madness. First, Olivia, Maria, Sir Toby and Fabian were all making Malvolio seem crazy and devil-possessed with his snobbery and arrogance. Then, the passage shows Olivia desperately in love, thinking she is like Malvolio--going mad. Lastly, Antonio's friendship to Sebastian ( who was actually Cesario) was introduced. Antonio was made to seem mad from his misdirected loyalty.