Item - category. Baltimore oriole is one type of item in the larger category of birds
he finds it uncomfortable
Answer:
a. Sarah doesn’t want to sit in the front row, nor do I.
b. Bill had to finish something at work, so he is running a little late.
c. The play starts in five minutes, so you’d better not go to the lobby now.
d. Making great tennis shots are a result of practicing the same stroke repeatedly. Being able to hit a golf ball well consistently is the likewise result of intense practice.
e. The senior students are performing extremely well in class. For example, Susan, Richard, and Kim take the highest grades.
f. You can stay at home or you can come alone. The choice is yours.
Explanation:
Just fixed one small error in each sentence. Hope they're correct for you!
Answer and Explanation:
The quote "all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others" was taken from Orwell's novella "Animal Farm". Even though "Animal Farm" criticizes Stalinist Russia, many of the flaws it points out can be noticed everywhere. We are constantly told we are all equal, that all human beings deserve to be treated with fairness in an unprejudiced manner. But, let's face it, some are "more equal than others".
As a woman, I've been through several moments when sexism was used to diminish me. I've been told plenty of times that I wouldn't understand something related to cars or to measuring houses simply because I was not a man. Still, I am more equal than a friend of mine, who is not only a woman, but a black woman. She was telling me the other day of the times she was followed around in department stores. Someone from the staff would watch her every move, afraid she would steal something. As I am white, that has never happened to me. It brought me to the sad realization that equality is still a utopia.
Note: I wrote an answer based on my real-life experiences. Feel free to adapt it to your own reality.
Answer:
<em>'He is the same colour </em><em>as </em><em>the earth, and a great deal less interesting to look at.'</em>
Explanation:
George Orwell uses Simile, a figurative language device that compares two things using the adverbs like or as.
When describing the people working on the land he refers to them as the unvisible part of a (beautiful) visible landscape. This is a very subtle way of critisizing the British Empire that ignores (they don´t see them) the working people who, seen by Orwell, are doing important work.