Answer: "in spite of the foggy weather" .
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Answer:
the utter absurdity of his plan
Explanation:
Satire is the use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices.
Jonathan Swift uses satire in his book <em>A Modest Proposal </em>to ridicule and mock the \British elites for their treatment of the Irish people by suggesting that selling off children would ease their economic troubles.
He uses satire throughout the essay to show the impracticability of the British policy that is supposed to remedy the sufferings of the Irish.
From the excerpt, Swift is showing the utter absurdity of the plan of using carcass to make dresses, gloves and boots.
This kenning suggests that Grendel is a creature from hell and is pure evil.
In Old Norse and Old English poetry, kennings are metaphors in the form of compound words. Here, "hell-forged" is a metaphor for Grendel's devilish nature and origins.
In <em>Beowulf</em>, Grendel is described as a "creature of darkness," a monstrous being rejected by God. According to J.R.R. Tolkien in <em>Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics</em> (1936), Grendel is "the evil spirits [taking] visible shape."
In To Kill a Mockingbird<span>, Scout narrates the tragic story of Tom Robinson's trial and the hypocrisy in Maycomb County. Injustice and bigotry define many of the people in the town, despite the fact that Atticus presents Tom's case and proves his innocence.</span>