In this excerpt, swift is listing tons of other suggestions that people have made. the long list begins with "<span>Therefore let no man talk to me of other expedients..." and he goes on to list these so-called "expedients"--which are measures or means to get attain something (and these means are often immoral).
just for context, "a modest proposal" is a satirical work. swift intends to paint these perfectly rational suggestions (from taxation to isolationism to increase their own failing economy) as something incredibly immoral, just before he suggests that his country begin eating children to sustain themselves.
this excerpt begins with "</span><span>I can think of no one objection, that will possibly be raised against this proposal..." which shows that swift believes HIS proposal to be the best of them all. (remember that this is a satire, so this emphasis is meant to be ironic. he knows his proposal is terrible, he's just proving a point.) from there, he begins listing all the other things that people have suggested and things that the government has tried within the country, and he basically pokes fun at them.</span>
Answer:
False.
Explanation:
A suffix is the part of a word that is positioned, usually at the end, after the root of the word.
In the case of the word "fallacy", the suffix is the affix "acy", which comes from Latin and means quality, state or condition. However, when this suffix joins the prefix "fall" forming the word "fallacy" we have a concrete meaning like "without being false." "Someone who does something false." "The state of being false." "Having the misfortune of being false." This is because the word "fallacy" represents an incoherent argument, which seems correct, but it is not.
1. Is b I believe
2. Is a I believe