“Wear” focuses on clothes that you already have on. “Put on” refers to clothes that you are going to get dressed into.
It is effective because it uses a rhetorical device to appeal to logic
Toward the end of 2007, the small town of Reeves, Louisiana, finally rid itself of a telephone area code that had been bedeviling its citizens since the 1960s — 666. Christians in Reeves were unhappy having the “number of the beast” for their prefix since being assigned it.
There is one major example of when tyranny is used in Animal Farm. The major example is when Napoleon calls a meeting between all the animals in the barn. The meeting is brutal and short, it starts with the pigs asking all animals to confess to committing bad crimes like talking to the enemy Snowball or stealing items from the harvest. Next come the brutal part, the animals are lined up and the dogs pulled the animals throats out with their sharp teeth, in total that meeting costed the lives of four pigs, three hens, three sheep and a goose. Afterwards all the animals that weren’t killed struggled to feel comfortable and some of them wanted to work harder for Napoleon because they were in fear of being killed in the same way. Tyrant strategies were often used under the rule of Napoleon, it became more prominent and frequently used towards the end of the book when Napoleon's way of ruling became lots more cruel and selfish. It was also used when Napoleon organised the dogs to run Snowball off the farm. Snowball was scared out of the farm because Napoleon organised the dogs to chase Snowball until they caught and killed him or he got off the farm.
<span>The
idea of this excerpt from John F. Kennedy’s speech is encouragement—encouragement
to fight for what is right, and what is right is freedom for all of humanity. This idea is introduced to us by the words “defending
freedom,” which appear at the beginning of the excerpt. The
idea is also reinforced at the end of the excerpt with the imperative statement
that implores citizens of the world to ask “what together we can do for the
freedom of man.”</span>