2. They could add whatever they wanted, and make it to their liking. They could also make it healthier, and to fit their nutritional needs.
3. The health benefits of eating home cooked opposed to fast food is that it can be much healthier. In home cooked food, there is much less sugar, salt, and all the bad stuff. You wouldn't have to worry about preservatives.
Boo is never seen outside his house until the end of the novel. Although Jem and the reader begin to suspect Boo is responsible for leaving gifts in the hole of the oak tree and sewing together Jem's torn trousers, he is not actually seen until he rescues Jem and Scout from Bob Ewell's attack.
Answer:
The statement that best summarizes the difference between these two ads is They have different appeals.
Explanation:
The ad from 1971 that was widely known as "The Crying Indian" was part of a campaign that has the purpose of making people aware of pollution and that they can do something to fix it, the appeal was emotional, while the campaign that they launched in 2013 add something more to it, they added a proposal so now besides being emotional it also has a sense of logic in it.
Answer:
Mockingjays
The mockingjay represents defiance in the novel, with the bird’s symbolism deriving initially from its origins. The mockingjay, we learn, came about as a result of a failed project by the Capitol to spy on the rebellious districts, and since then the bird has served as a reminder of this failure and the districts’ recalcitrance—Katniss describes them as “something of a slap in the face to the Capitol.” The mockingjay pin Madge gives to Katniss is at first an emblem of that resistance. Later in the novel, however, the birds come to symbolize a different sort of defiance. Mockingjays become a link between Katniss and Rue, with the two using the birds to communicate. When Rue dies, Katniss decorates her body with flowers as a means of memorializing Rue, but also to defy the Capitol. When Katniss later sees mockingjays, they remind her of Rue, and that memory inevitably stirs her hatred of the Capitol and her wish to rebel, and take revenge, against it. The mockingjay consequently takes on an additional layer of symbolism, representing not only a general rebellion against the Capitol, but also Katniss’s specific desire to defy it.