In "Cairo: My City, Our Revolution", by Ahdaf Soueif, at the end of the second paragraph, Soueif writes "We don't know it yet, but the lights of Cairo will not come on tonight".
In 2011 there are mass demonstrations against corruption, poverty, and political repression. Organized by youth groups that are independent of traditional parties. They want Mubarak, president for almost thirty years to step down and allow free elections. Soueif is both a revolutionary and a writer. She doesn't want to lose touch with revolution so she both protests and writes. In the sentence above she tells us how this demonstration is going to end that night. A curfew is imposed on Cairo by the government. Soueif, wanted the book to be more than a record of the revolution. Her description of the present, by a glimpse into the future, is very vivid. They didn't know what would happen to them that night. It is a present that is constantly changing.
Answer:
The phrases that show the difference between what the man thinks and what the reader suspects are:
- Those old-timers were rather warmish
- Any man who was a man could travel alone
Explanation:
These are examples of dramatic irony, where the author allows the reader to be aware of some things that the characters do not have. This allows the reader to be able to create their own suspicions regarding the plot that are not shared between the characters, which form completely different suspicions.
B.....
Alliteration is the answer.
" him " is gonna be ur objective pronoun...because it is a pronoun used as an indirect object