Answer:
Needs the passage where it's from
Explanation:
Provide what article or passage this is in.
Answer:
It is a quote about rebellion which is exactly what Montag is doing when he keeps the books and then reads them.
Explanation:
This quote comes from the book Gulliver's Travels. At this point in the book, the narrator is talking about how the people have gone to war over which side of the egg should be broken. Traditionally, they always broke their eggs at the larger end, but after the prince cut his finger doing this, there was an edict that eggs should always be broken at the smaller end. People revolted and were killed. The purpose of this is to show how petty and ridiculous governing bodies can be over minuscule thing.
In Fahrenheit 451, the quote illustrates what Montag is coming to understand about the rules that govern his society. It also reveals that knowledge can't come in just pieces, you need the whole or the context in order to better understand it. A person, or government, should not just pick and choose what knowledge to share and not to share.
Answer:
please leave an explanation
Explanation:
Answer:
were hoping
Explanation:
to explain what they were doing
Answer:
Elie Wiesel, Nobel Laureate, a Jewish, World War II holocaust survivor, who lost his family as a child in the holocaust and had fought tirelessly against injustice, in his Nobel peace prize acceptance speech on 1986 swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation.
Explanation:
I took the Test