Well instead of reading them
it is way easier to learn and it stays in your brain for a while if you type or write it out
hope this helps :3
Answer: SOMEONE decided to take down my answer because it was "incomplete" not gonna name any names of who took down my answer.........
SIKE there username is laurenercsp6fpli. Please help me report them and get them banned becuase they have been removing a lot of answers and questions for no reason, when absolutely nothing was wrong with them. I answered this question first but because the girl decided to delete my answer I'm now the second person who answered this question even though the guy above me took my answer. I now have one warning because she has taken down so many answers and questions that were appropriate and correct.
Explanation: oh and the answer is:"I, uh, am confused. Weren't we leaving at noon?" asked Carla.
The guy above me stole my answer and u can clearly see that I wrote complaints about how the guy who wote the question didnt even give me brainliest even tho I was first. PLLLLSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS help me get this person banned so other ppl dont get our credit. TY.
This question is missing the options. I've found them online:
How does Orwell use satire in this passage?
a) to present the opposite of the normal order of things
b) to mimic the situation directly to produce a comical effect
c) to expose and condemn the corruption and character flaws of the pigs
d) to exaggerate Mr. Pilkington’s kindness toward the animals on the farm
Answer:
Orwell uses satire in this passage to:
c) to expose and condemn the corruption and character flaws of the pigs
Explanation:
"Animal Farm" is an allegorical novella by George Orwell. It was written as a criticism of the Soviet regime to which Russia was subjected by Stalin. Orwell himself was a democratic-socialist.
The excerpt we are analyzing here was taken from the final chapter of the book. It portrays a meeting between the pigs from Animal Farm and Mr. Pilkington. <u>The animals from the farm tried to establish a fair and equal society after expelling their human owner. However, after becoming the leaders of the new society, the pigs realized their position gave them advantages. Soon, they became more and more similar to humans. They began to exploit the other animals, creating a clear distinction between themselves and the others. They also began to trade with the very humans they once despised. In this excerpt, Pilkington is complimenting the pigs on the way they treat the animals that are below them in social hierarchy. The fact that a corrupt human is complimenting the pigs serves to expose the pigs' corruption and character flaws.</u>
It is a place where something is made.