So we were in a hall like a
P.E hall and I had my dolls out like the ones i got a couple of years ago but then all of a sudden they disappeared and loads of dogs appeared so of course you know me I stole 2 but then we had to hide so I hid in the corner of the room with the dogs but Voldemort came in the room saying “WHERE ARE MY DOGS GONE “ and I just like popped out of the Corner with the dogs in my hands and I say “idk” and then me and Voldemort had a full on magic fight and of course I won .and then I had to give the dogs back to the owners cause I’m a nice person but then we were in a car with Grace Tracy like the chemist person and Mam but grace had like done something wrong at the chemist like stole something so she had to apologise but then we were back in the hall room and mam asked for the dolls and I had a one with really brown curly hair and a one with black straight hair and a blond one with curlyish hair but I wanted to keep the first two and she could have the last one but I didn’t let her have the first one cause thats s the one I wanted to keep . I went shopping w Voldemort and when I came back my drink spilled and she vid angry at me so then that part ended .and then we were in the car again and grace had to apologise for something she did to Tracy
So I had to look up what some thing meant for you (grace).but I had to connect to the wifi in the chemist but Tracy had blocked our family’s phones and all that from her wifi so I couldn’t use it and then ....the End .
The answer would be A. Another possibility is C. Hope this helped :)
Answer:
When Orwell saw a kid whipping a horse, he had an idea: "It struck me that if only such animals became aware of their strength we should have no power over them, and that men exploit animals in much the same way as the rich exploit the proletariat."
Hello, Animal Farm.
On Orwell's Animal Farm-originally Manor Farm-different animals represent different members of the proletariat (working class) or the Russian communist regime. We won't take you through all the details here (see "Symbols, Imagery, Allegory" and the "Character Analyses" for the full lowdown), but the point is that Orwell picked the setting of the farm because it would work well as an allegory.
At the same time, Orwell includes little details like, "the birds jumped on to their perches, the animals settled down in the straw, and the whole farm was asleep in a moment" (1.20). There's no allegorical purpose to these images; they just give the setting a sense of completeness (although may not exactly realism).
But why an English farm rather than, say, a Russian farm? Well, Orwell wasn't just criticizing Stalin. He was also criticizing the myth of Stalinism that intellectuals all over the West believed. By setting it in England, he brought it that much closer to home
Answer:
dagger
Explanation:
option b plss give me brainlist