This should be a slippery slope logical fallacy.
That's when you start with a thing and swiftly move on to the consequences that may come from that thing and are usually negative. Here you have the slippery slope that if you don't do your homework, you are bound to fail and end up being a failure while it is not so in reality.
Short answer B
Argument
It isn't C either. Any number of reasons could be the cause of a book that size. Taking care of the building alone would result in a huge number of pages that don't really concern anyone but the owner and the person responsible for taking care of the building. Tax deductions would be another problem and so would overtime and reporting methods.
Assembly lines methods have nothing to do with lights that offer options to the basic model of anything being made assembled or manufactured. Not in the way fast foods would use the term.
The answer is B. The object is to get the hamburgers cooked. Knowing that the process takes 90 seconds and they start frozen, go onto a conveyor belt and come out cooked is so typical of assembly line methods.
Answer:
The servant is willing to attempt whatever is asked of him, unlike the king who asks others to do work that he can take credit for.
Explanation:
"The Water of Life" is a short story written by Howard Pyle. The story is about a faithful servant. There was no else as faithful as him in the whole world. The faithful servant wore a golden armlet that fitted his wrist as his own skin.
The theme of the story is the reward hardwork and guile. The faithful servant in the story was a hardworking servant that performed the tasks without questioning the king or asking anything in return. Whereas, the young king was filled with guile and wanted to take credit of his servant's hardwork.
<u>The attitude of this faithful servant towards the impossible tasks was that he was willing to attempt them. He, on every task, said that he will try to do these tasks. And he succeeded in all those tasks. On the other hand, attitude of the young king towards these impossible tasks was that he asked his servant to perform these tasks and took credit of it</u>.