The correct answer is B) The counterclaim is supported by strong evidence.
Even if the claim is valid (which excludes option A), it does not offer other evidence than the author's perception that crowds disturb the city and looks for the audience to agree on that. This lack of strong evidence supporting the author's claim also invalidates option C.
On the other hand, there is a counterclaim (excluding option D) that actually offers strong evidence supporting it. The fact that the festival attracts lots of tourists and generates revenue for the city, including the local businesses that support the festival, is strong evidence that supports the claim that the festival should be maintained.
So the only correct answer is option B.
I don't see all of the answer choices, but those two lines definitely maintain the lighthearted tone in the poem. wordsworth is describing a positive experience he had with nature, so i would pick whichever choice that says those lines express his happiness.
Is there a passage that goes with it if so can u show it
Answer:
1a. Lines 30-36 show that the man never thought deeply of things. He did not reason beyond the surface of matters and that was why he never thought that the abnormal temperature could be indicative of danger.
1b. These lines are a foreshadowing of the danger or negative consequence the man will face as a result of his inability to use his instincts.
2. (I believe the word should be naturalistic). A naturalistic view of life sees all events in life as natural and not having any spiritual or metaphysical undertones. In lines 5-20, the man had a natural view of the weather condition as being just normal. Also, when the water from the man's mouth became ice, he believed that to be natural and not having any further meaning.
Explanation:
In further explaining how the man regarded 50 degrees below zero, to mean 80 degrees of frost, the author showed that the man did not think deeply about matters. For example, he never reasoned about man's weakness and how fragile he is from his inability to cope with high and very low limits of temperature.
These things never made him think about life and death. These are signs that he might pay dearly for his inability to use his senses.
Answer:
The two lines, from the dialogue that support climax, are as follows:
- “when at last he lay sleeping quietly, she summoned all the courage and lit the lamp.”
- “she tiptoed to the bed and, looked at his eyes widely."
Explanation:
Climax is a specific component in a story that indicates the conclusion of the story. It acts as a cliff for the story plot and changes the overall dynamics of the story. In the story Cupid and psyche, the story takes a new turn when she lits the lamp and looks him.