Answer:
Starbucks because their drinks are better then dunkin
Explanation:
❤I'm positive this is the awncer ❤The Utopians are not concerned about dressing fashionably.<span>❤ please crown me brainliest</span><span>❤</span>
Answer:
The doctor is a psychologist. Our knowledge of him informs us that Ponyboy is in a state of psychological distress which may indicate psychological problems, moreover, we can see that the audience has the function of judging Ponyboy's psychology based on what the doctor says about him.
Explanation:
The doctor is a psychologist responsible for assessing the condition of the condition that Ponyboy is in. That's because Ponyboy is shaken and very depressed after a crime led to Johnny's death. In addition to having a very delicate psychologist, he is disturbed and in denial about everything that happened.
The audience needs to have a diagnosis of Ponyboy's psychology, so that it is possible to decide whether it is safe for him to live with Darry, or for the safety of everyone, it is best to leave them apart. For this reason, the presence of the doctor is necessary.
Personification:
"The parlour was dead and Mildred kept peering in at it with a blank expression as Montag paced the floor and came back and squatted down and read a page as many as ten times, aloud." (Page 32)
This use of figurative language illustrates Montag's loneliness and feelings of isolation.
Simile:
"He stared at the parlour that was dead and grey as the waters of an ocean that might teem with life if they switched on the electronic sun." (Page 33)
The simile above helps us to understand how technology alienates us from reality.
Metaphor:
"Maybe the books can get us half out of the cave. They just might stop us from making the same daxmxn insane mistakes!" (Page 34)
This metaphor illustrates the huge barrier between Montag and Mildred. He needs reality, whereas, she is content and happy to live stagnantly through the lives of fictional beings.
Source(s)
Fahrenheit 451
Answer: B. Progress should be sought only in manners that are acceptable to society.
All of these creation stories have as their main character an individual who wants to achieve progress and knowledge by going against the rules that have been established in their society.
In the case of Adam and Eve, Eve's trangression is eating the forbidden fruit in the garden of Eden. Because of this, many of humanity's problems are born. In the myth of Prometheus and Pandora, both characters break the rules that had been imposed on them: Prometheus steals the fire from Zeus and Pandora opens the box that should not have been opened. Finally, in Frankenstein, it is Victor who breaks the rules. The rules he breaks are those of nature and science, as he attempts to create a living being. We realize the experiment was a bad idea when we see the suffering the creature feels and the destruction that it causes.
Therefore, all three stories support the idea of only seeking progress in a way that conforms to society's rules.