part B and part a
I think because he also saw that back people give it a big čule or hint it's part a or part b
In order to answer this question, one must think about the time period. This is long before women had jobs outside of the home. They were expected to care for the home and the children, take care of the needs of their husband, and be seen, not heard. Keeping those characteristics in mind and reading through all the answers, the only logical answer would be the first one: In the 1800s, women were expected to be submissive to men (do what they are told to do by the man), and Nora was discovering that Helmer has taken advantage of that.
Answer: He wants to make his opinions known without being obviously insulting.
Explanation:
The options include:
A. He wants to let the British know that their society is superior to his.
B. He hopes that only his Indian friends will understand his humor.
C. He wants to make his opinions known without being obviously insulting.
D. He hopes to anger the British so they will relinquish their hold on India.
Sarcasm is an ironic remark whereby one says the opposite of what I've or she meant in order to mock someone else or insult the person.
Mukharji use sarcasm to describe his
experiences in London because he wants to make his opinions known without being obviously insulting.
A)Please review our suggestion for paving over the muddy area where students wait before school.
Option A has the correct revision for a formal email. It states the topic without using any informal tone or voice. Option B is informal because of the introductory phrase "you now" and the vagueness of the observation "it's gross." Option C is informal due to the words "awesome" and "gross". Option D is informal because of the use of the word "obviously" and "smart".
<h2><u>Answer:</u></h2>
The three allusions Ralph Waldo Emerson makes are Francis Bacon, Irish dayworkers, Coeur-de Lions.
In the beginning of the "Society and Solitude" he talks about the capital and mentions how it is the want of animals spirits and in this excerpt appears all these three.
"The capital imperfection of cool, dry natures is the need of creature spirits. They appear a power inconceivable, as though God should raise the dead. The hermit observes what others perform by their guide, with a sort of dread. It is as much out of his probability as the ability of Coeur-de-Lion, or an Irishman's day's-take a shot at the railroad. As Bacon said of habits, "To get them, it just needs not to detest them,"