The answer is A: Provide some explanation of what made Junius, Socrates, Epaminondas, Cato the Younger, and Sir Thomas More such an interesting group.
Although lacking in modesty, one could recommend the answer above to the great satirist writer, Jonathan Swift, to improve the allusion in the passage. Being a learned man, Swift had control over the thoughts of the characters cited, but, then, as now, it would have been illuminating for the common reader to expand on the thoughts that made each character relevant and why they´d be put into a single group, they who were, in so many ways, so different: Junius, the Stoic philosopher, Socrates, the lover of wisdom, Epaminondas and Cato the younger, the wise Greek and Roman statesmen, respectively, and, finally, More, English philosopher and statesman alike.
Answer:
4. Their
Explanation:
Things to help you understand better:
Their is the possessive pronoun, as in "their car is red"; there is used as an adjective, "he is always there for me," a noun, "get away from there," and, chiefly, an adverb, "stop right there"; they're is a contraction of "they are," as in "they're getting married."
Words like "huddled" and "miserable" cause the reader to feel sorry for the people.
Answer:
So far what I know about Zebra is he's a runner. In the first paragraph, it states how they started to call him Zebra before or after he started running. It also looks like Zebra enjoys zebras. In the third and fourth paragraphs, it states how he went to see zebras in the zoo and in a movie. That's most likely how he fell in love with zebras. That's what we know about Zebra judging from the 4 given paragraphs.
Answer:
Science, technology, engineering and mathematics workers play a key role in the sustained growth and stability of the U.S. economy, and are a critical component to helping the U.S. win the future. STEM education creates critical thinkers, increases science literacy, and enables the next generation of innovatorS
Explanation: