Answer: b. it was then that diana moon glampers, the handicapper general, came into the studio with a double-barreled ten-gauge shotgun.
A dystopia is a society that is undesirable or frightening. It is the opposite of <em>utopia</em>. This short story by Kurt Vonnegut is an example of a dystopia, as the characters live through events that are undesirable. The best line to describe it is B, because it shows the element of control of the government, which is what makes their condition so miserable.
Answer:
2
Explanation:
income can sometimes help to pay tax reveneu and income can help people to aquire their basic needs and income can be saved for future use
Answer:
The speaker climbs a mountain path, which suggests an upward struggle; thus, the setting underscores the central theme of resilience in the face of adversity
Explanation:
This question refers to Charlotte Perkins Gilman's poem "An Obstacle".
From the poem we see that the narrator climbs up the mountain path, that she is busy, with many things to do for her and for other people and that she is carrying a heavy load. Her path is already hard so big and collosal incubus, the Prejudice, which suddenly appear, made it impossible to climb up.
This path most likely symbolizes struggles of women at the time and the Prejudice (that women aren't equal to men) only made their struggles and everyday life even harder.
So, climbing up this steep mountain path suggests women's efforts to overcome adversity and resilience they show.
Answer:
Ashoka (Brāhmi: , Asoka,[4] IAST: Aśoka, English: /əˈʃoʊkə/), also known as Ashoka the Great, was an Indian emperor of the Maurya Dynasty, who ruled almost all of the Indian subcontinent from c. 268 to 232 BCE.[5][6] A grandson of the dynasty's founder Chandragupta Maurya, Ashoka promoted the spread of Buddhism across ancient Asia. Considered by many to be one of India's greatest emperors, Ashoka expanded Chandragupta's empire to reign over a realm stretching from present-day Afghanistan in the west to Bangladesh in the east. It covered the entire Indian subcontinent except for parts of present-day Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala. The empire's capital was Pataliputra (in Magadha, present-day Patna), with provincial capitals at Taxila and Ujjain.
Answer: Do not be easily fooled.
Explanation:
Time and again the Bear fooled the Coyote yet the Coyote kept trusting the Bear without thinking.
The first time the Coyote was tricked into taking Potato stalks but the Coyote could not be blamed for it was the first time.
The second time however the Coyote should have been more cautious but he wasn't and got fooled again.
The third time, the Coyote still again trusted the bear whom he should have known by then not to be a good friend but instead he let himself get fooled again to the amusement of the bear.
The lesson is therefore to not be fooled easily.