Answer:
The answer is your first option: <u>If a true utopia can ever be achieved, everyone must share the same vision and be willing to act for the common
</u>
<u>good.</u>
Explanation:
The second and third option aren't the strongest choice for an essay explaining the writer's vision of a utopia, as the third option explains how he prepared his text and well the answer is:<em> by presenting many characteristics, </em>this doesn't give us any writer's vision at all, only a structure of his text. The second option, although it is indeed presenting the writer's vision, it isn't the strongest, for it only presents three limited and specified reasons; whereas, the first option, presents two visions, but they're not limited as sharing the same vision implies many things, acting for the common good too, for instance; giving shelter to the less fortunates in cold weather, feeding people on Thanksgiving, donating clothes, etc, etc... So this is the reson why this is the strongest choice.
Answer:
Explanation:
Present the authors claim that paris has great restraunts with a relevant image
Present a bullet list of restraunts described in the text
Present a statement that explains how the list of restraunts develop the claim
The answer would be point of view
Humor and satire draw attention to the subject, making readers think about it. The more they think about it, the more they consider it a serious point. Consideration leads to more attention for the author, and therefore the author sells more books. See, everything ties back to commercialism! You know, if you think about it though, it's true. Humor and satire draw our attention because they make us laugh. We humans<span> like to laugh, so of </span>course<span>, we will remember what made us laugh. So remembering it will make us consider it, and considering it makes us see it as a serious point.</span>
Is this supposed to be a pun orrrrr