The correct answer is option A ("Sarcastic").
In this short excerpt from Jonathan Swift's poem "The Lady's Dressing Room", we have <u>a couple of clues</u> that clearly enough indicate a sarcastic tone.
Primarily, what I'm looking at is <u>the choice of words</u> from the author:
The woman is not being addressed as a simple human but rather a female deity or <u>goddess</u>. Her struggles (as large as they may seem to her), are somewhat dismissed or mocked by the poet considering that the lady is surrounded by luxury. The mention of <u>brocades</u> also points towards that tonal direction, given that it's a highly expensive fabric most commonly laced with gold or silver.
Hope this helps!
A. Both vertical and horizontal relationships represent equal status
Answer:
*when
*because
Explanation:
signal is giving an explanation
-when this happened...
-because they...
"When doing a persuasive speech you have to keep in mind that you want to convince the audience to believe in what you are telling them, or support your claim, in this case you are already biased by this desire, the key to persuade people is to know how to convince them, and you can do this easiyl with strong writting and a powerful delivery."
The correct answer is:
- <em>It makes fun of human weaknesses through humorous characters. </em>
- <em>It exposes human flaws by exaggerating characters' weaknesses. </em>
- <em>It ridicules socially acceptable behavior by showing how characters' good intentions backfire. </em>
Explanation:
<em>Characterization is the way information about a character is delivered to the audience</em>, while <em>satire is a technique used to expose and criticize</em> through humor, iron, sarcasm and exaggeration. Characterization through satire helps the author show<u> the weaknesses, flaws and awkward behaviors</u> of a character in an entertaining way to the audience and change their perspective towards the character.