Answer:
The type of irony found in this excerpt is: situational irony.
Explanation:
Situational irony is a literary device consisting of leading the reader to believe a certain event / ending will take place and then unexpectedly changing the outcome.
The author describes Chef Kylie's dishes in detail. Readers get to know that his most acclaimed dishes all consist of meat - lots and lots of meat. With such a description, it is ironic for the author to, all of a sudden, reveal that the chef is actually a vegetarian. Most readers probably do not see it coming at all. Who would expect a vegetarian to used so much meat in their own cooking? Why would a vegetarian cook something they do not eat themselves? Readers are thus shocked by this revelation, and that is where the situational irony lies.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
In this passage C is not mentioned at all. This is about leadership and how it is to be conducted.
B is likely true but not emphasized. And certainly not mentioned in the historical note.
D is certainly true but not mentioned in the historical note.
A I think I'd pick A. It is stated in both passages. Don't be surprised if D is chosen.
Answer hope this is right Anglo-Saxon Britain wasn't ruled by one person and the Anglo-Saxons were not united
can i have a brainliest if this helped please
You can use a little trick here: interrogative is essentually a question! and here one of the sentences has a question mark at the end. Is it a question? it is! so it's the correct answer! (also there are no other questions here).
Answer:
D and E
D. "He stops at a barbershop. His hair is curly and far too long. It is an easy tip-off. People here tend to have straighter hair."
E. "'¡Órale, jefe!' he says, using a phrase Oaxacans favor. 'Hey, chief!' He mutes his flat Central American accent and speaks softly and singsongy, like an Oaxacan."
Explanation:
The above excerpt shows how difficult it was to interact with the local population in Oaxaca, especially when an individual, like Enrique, was very different from the natives and seemed to have an exotic experience for them, which highlighted him and did not allow him to fit in. Knowing this and needing to interact and fit in with the population, Enrique, through his intelligence and resourcefulness, realized that it would be positive if he cut his big curly hair, to look more like the local population and to be so out of place among the natives, who used to have straight and shorter hair.