This question is a matter of opinion, but I would say HECK NO! Middle school by my experience was the most brutal, and I don't think I could've endured it if the days were extended. A lot of the kids who endure bullying or tormenting as I did would agree. I also believe there comes a time in the day when our focus level goes down, and we are not able to comprehend things as well, which I believe is worse with kids because their minds run constantly. Also I believe they would struggle with learning because all they would be able to think about is getting home.
Hello. You did not present the full text or answer options for this question, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. However, I will try to help you in the best possible way.
Logical fallacies are information that seems true, but is incorrect, because it is determined from generalizations, and irrational, defective and false reasoning. In this case, the best way to remove the possible logical fallacies of a text is, reading it and removing any kind of generalization and statements without correct and verifiable foundations, which present real evidences about its veracity.
It is a metaphor. A simile has like or as in it.
Verbal: communication with words, which may be done orally through speech or physically through sign language
Nonverbal: communication that does not involve words
Interpersonal: any type of communication, verbal or nonverbal, between two or more people
Group: communication between groups of people or within a group of people
From my previous ans to ur Q last week:
Daisy is the ultimate status symbol; at least for Gatsby she is. In a way, she IS the American Dream. W<span>hen Daisy and Gatsby reunite and begin an affair, it seems like Gatsby could in fact achieve his goal.
But </span>Daisy refuses to leave Tom and Gatsby is killed by George. With the “strivers” all dead, the old money crowd is safe again. <span>Daisy was born with money and does not need to strive for great wealth or other far-off things from the American Dream.
</span>Nick describes Daisy as “High in a white palace the king’s daughter, the golden girl,” literally considering Daisy as a prize. He also pessimistically says, “you can’t repeat the past”, implying there is but a small window for certain dreams. The dreams cannot be achieved once the window is closed.
Nick is not happy with his family’s respectable fortune and his girlfriend out west. At the end, <span>Nick sadly meditates on the lost promise of the American Dream
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The part on Nick was a little thin - as Nick explains in the book, the American dream was originally about discovery, individualism, and the pursuit of happiness. It has been corrupted by <span>easy money and relaxed social values. Nick</span><span> realized after Gatsby's death: the dream was also about learning from the past.
"On Nick’s last night in the East, he walks over to Gatsby’s mansion. Nick looks out along the beach and wonders what this land was like long ago-when it was a new and unspoiled world. Nick sees the green light. The green light represents the dream. The pure dream that Gatsby had. The purity of the American Dream is something that is in our past. The past of our nation, and in the innocence of our youth.
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Nick realizes that what Gatsby had was the sense of unlimited promise. He possessed The American Dream. An older and wiser Nick returns to the Midwest."