Answer:
C. If legislation can ban straws, it can also ban forks and takeout containers.
Explanation:
Here we see the slippery slope fallacy at work—the mistaken belief that one event necessarily leads to another with no causal relationship between them.
The author here implies that a ban on plastic straws will lead to a broader ban on single-use items like forks and takeaway containers.
Answer:
In paragraph 23 of Ray Bradbury's All Summer in a Day, Margot is created as a nine-year-old protagonist who relocates from Earth to Venus.
On this occasion (Page 23 that is,) she is featured in an emotional state wherein she misses her home planet and the intensity of the Sun she felt.
She expresses these memories and positive feelings using metaphorical statements such as the sun being a flower that blooms for only an hour every seven years on Venus.
In contrast to Earth, the sun was available for about 7 hours per day, every day.
Explanation:
The text from which the question is excerpted is a science fiction genre written in 1950.
Because Venus is about 67 million miles from the sun (that is, seventy-two percent of the distance from Earth to the sun, there is a great difference in the amount of daylight received on Earth in contrast to that which is received on Venus.
For Margot, she was very homesick. She imagined that the kids her age at Venus had even forgotten how the sun looked like given that it appeared about seven years ago for just one hour.
The above is the picture the writer tries to capture in the story.
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Answer:
Hey mate......
Explanation:
This is ur answer......
<em>Most people consider their own mental processes to be what thinking is, without ever considering the nature of the activity and without ever questioning the effectiveness of their particular methods. Modern schooling practices discourage critical thinking by their very nature (e.g. multiple-choice testing) and leave young people without this most crucial of acquired life skills. Much of the mental activity most people indulge in is counterproductive and unworthy of the term ‘thinking’. Thinking is an important mental process. It helps us to define and organise experiences, plan, learn, reflect and create. But sometimes our thinking may for a variety of reasons become unhelpful and this has a negative impact on our well being.</em>
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Answer: 1. Unite Government 2. Infirm Citizens
Explanation:
I would say shared sorrow but I'm not exactly sure