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Misha Larkins [42]
3 years ago
5

Read this sentence from the story:

English
1 answer:
Hunter-Best [27]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

She meant a royal and wealthy class.

Explanation:

Materials made of purple and fine-linen were especially difficult to sew and were thus reserved for the royal families in ancient times. When Pauline was thinking about Joan she acknowledged that even though Joan's father did not make much as a countryside doctor, Joan dressed well enough and had an air that belonged to the purple-and-fine-linen class. This means that Joan had the disposition of a wealthy child.

Pauline could think of Joan in this light because she was a wealthy snob.

have a nice day/night <3

good luck <3

-Dan

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People who read percy jackson and the lightning thief can u help me with this​
Ira Lisetskai [31]

Line 1: Percy

Line 2: Brave, heroic, honest, and loyal

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Line 4: Who loves Grover and Annabeth

Who hates Ares and Luke

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Line 10: Resident of Manhattan

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This took a long time. Have a great day!

7 0
3 years ago
Which type of ad will only focus on the positive aspects of a product?
CaHeK987 [17]
Omission because patritosm is love for ones country statistics is how the product really is so omission is the winner by process of elimination 
4 0
3 years ago
2. The Cherry Tree - Ruskin Bond<br>Short Story<br>why are they living together<br>​
Arisa [49]

Explanation:

cause his parents sent him to his grandfather house who was a retriever

3 0
3 years ago
PLEASE HELP ASAP!!
yarga [219]

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ♡ ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━  

In Matched by Ally Condie, the government is very strict and your whole life is controlled by the government.

For example; you have to die at 80; your husband/wife is chosen by the "matching machine" (I forgot what it is called); you are given three pills (which the red one you must take if instructed and you can't take if they don't say so; If you don't do what they say, you will be punished; You can't really choose your life; and the things you can decide, your not ever allowed to change.

There are many negatives to this kind of government control. In Matched, the government requires you to die at 80 years old. Maybe it doesn't matter, since old people (in this book) can't really make any more accomplishments, but who doesn't want to live more? Also, your wife/husband is chosen by a machine. Would if you are not "meant to be" or would if the machine made a mistake? In the book, Cassia did not end up falling in love with Xavier. The machine made a mistake. Also, the pills are not good. The red one erases your memory. You can only take it is the Society says so, and you must take it. The blue pill kills you. Also, if you don't do what they chose for you, you are punished.

But maybe life is simpler this way. If you are killed at 80, it might be less painfull than you dying of cancer or something. Plus you won't really accomplish anything after you get old. Also, if the machine rarely ever make mistakes, you won't have to get heartbroken so many times to find the "one" because the machine already knows. About the pills, the red one erases your memory. If something bad happened, you would have to take it and forget all about that. But usually, the things the Society wants you to forget about are about rebels and their plan. The blue pills are supposed to kill you, which isn't good at all, but it might be a lesson for not being too greedy.

Overall, I think there are more negative of the government taking control in this way. People are supposed to be free; they should be able to do whatever they want; after all, it is their life. The government wants everyone to be controlled their way, so if you disobey or do not follow, the punishments are brutal. They also don't want people to know about the rebels and/or their plans, so they force people to take the red pills. And the blue pills kill you.

The government in Matched by Ally Condie has a lot of negatives and some positives.

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ♡ ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━  

4 0
4 years ago
John Proctor tells his wife Elizabeth that her “justice would freeze beer.” What does he mean by this example of hyperbole? Who
Dafna11 [192]

This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.

Read The Crucible, by Arthur Miller

John Proctor tells his wife Elizabeth that her “justice would freeze beer.” What does he mean by this example of hyperbole? Who is acting most reasonable in this scene—John or Elizabeth? Explain.

Answer:

Proctor claims he feels judged by Elizabeth, and the hyperbole used refers to how cold she is, so cold that she could freeze beer, which freezes at a colder temperature than water. He means that she has no warm feelings for him, as in no compassion.

Explanation:

However, I think that Elizabeth is the most reasonable in this scene, given that Proctor has lied to her about being alone with Abigail.

5 0
3 years ago
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