Answer:
Not real but can happen. is the correct answer.
Explanation:
<u>Answer:
</u>
The detail from the text that best supports the answer to part A is "Dystopian authors argued that the pursuit of perfection will inevitably lead not to ‘no place’ but to a ‘bad place’, because of flaws within the system”
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- The Part A of the text speaks about the discipline of Dystopia.
- The given text exhibits a resemblance of meaning between the two as it progresses.
- It is through part A of the text itself that we get a crude idea of dystopia.
D. Nonfiction doesn't depend on a plot.
You can read a science textbook, which is considered non-fiction, and have no story or plot behind any of the words. It can have a plot, but it does not DEPEND on it.
Answer/Explanation:
Proctor, God's emissary, bravely surrenders his life, restoring the dignity to his name, removing the shame and guilt from his sin, cleansing it for his family, his wife, and children. The name Proctor means steward or charged with the care of something. Early in the play, Proctor's desire to preserve his good name keeps him from testifying against Abigail.
Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) uses a fine humor style which is easily detected in extracts like:
<em>"Thish-yer Smiley had a mare; the boys called the fifteen minute nag(...) for all she was so slow and always had the asthma, or the distemper or the consumption, or something of that kind."</em>
<em>"...And he had a little small bull pup, that to look at him you´d think he warn´t worth a cent(...) his underjaw´d begin to stick out like the fo´castle of a steamboat..."</em>
<em>"...He ketched a frog one day, and took him home, and said he cal´klated to edercate him(...) and you bet you he did learn him, too.</em>
Twain is satirizing several aspects of American life, but specially the country "punks" who tend to speak at length about subjects that are close to them but are really unimportant an nonsensical.