The sentence that contains an oxymoron would be answer choice <u>A</u>. “<em>A wise fool.</em>” is contradictory to one another; thus rendering it an oxymoron.
"If you save your money" modifies "will be [able]".
"Will be" is a verb, thus the modifier is an adverbial phrase.
B. quoting, summarizing, paraphrasing, and providing data
In a research paper, evidence is used to support the author's thesis statement or main idea. Evidence is information taken from outside reliable sources to prove that the author's ideas are based in fact and worth paying attention to. Evidence can be a direct quote, a summary of information, a paraphrase, or relevant data. For example a research paper on school violence in Boston might contain a direct quote from a school resource officer, a summary of the worst instances of violence, a paraphrase of information about psychological effects of school shootings, and statistics about the prevalence of violence in schools.
It is important to cite evidence in a research paper by giving credit to the source from which the evidence came. To do this the author must use a works cited page and parenthetical citations. However, while these give credit to the evidence used, they are not a type of evidence.
I don't like your first sentence, 'George Orwell was the author of many amazingly written novels.' Is your essay about the quote, or about George Orwell? The first sentence should be strong and grab the reader's attention, either being a hook or being your topic sentence. I would start it something like this:
George Orwell provides a litany of knowledge and wisdom in his 1945 allegorical novella <em>Animal Farm, </em>including what has become one of his most recognizable quotes; "Man is The Only Creature That Consumes Without Producing."
This might grab the reader's attention, it introduces the topic, an it implicitly asks a question; WHY has this become one of his most recognizable quotes, what is special about it? I'd use the few next sentences of the introduction to present the sub topics that that will be examined in each of the body paragraphs. Maybe one on the quote's context in the novel, perhaps one on your interpretation of its philosophical meaning, etc...
Also ditch the 'In this essay, I will be sharing my thinking about this', that should be obvious from a good topic sentence. Also never use 'I'. Be confident in your information and analysis, state it as fact.
I think that these answers are the ones. Don't count on it tho.
Vulgar
Devil's
Indecent