Sorry can’t see the answers
<span>1. Sock it to your pocket! If you want your bicycle to be Italian-crafted, gold-painted and crystal-festooned, then you can fork out an eye-watering £43,000. For the rest of us, though, getting our hands on a speed machine is incredibly affordable. Indeed, a decent road or mountain bike will set you back no more than £100 and last for years, with an obligatory helmet another £20 on top. Legally, you don’t have to wear a helmet of course, but if you're anything like me you're probably quite attached to your head. For the sake of twenty quid just use it – don’t lose it.
2. Dash for cash. Even better than the low costs of cycling are the benefits to be had from it. Who’d be a driver? Record pump prices and speed cameras; bus lanes and uninsured drivers; parking fees and traffic wardens; the list goes on and on. Well, once you've got the bike and helmet you don't need to worry. Every minute in the saddle is saving you cash, time and hassle!
Hope this helps! :)</span>
Answer:
I think that the main conflict of the story was Person vs. Society, Marcus vs. government taking over and their surveillance of the city. Marcus must constantly battle his society that is taken over by the government under control by the DHS.
Explanation:
In this excerpt from Jack London's <em>The Call of the Wild</em>, we can observe the characters struggling to survive in dire environmental circumstances; it's extremely cold, they're having issues to build a fire, they have nowhere to escape. The only conflict mentioned in this excerpt is them trying to survive in these difficult setting. Therefore, your best answer is character vs. nature.
Answer:
The author indicates specific word choices to stress the vastness and greatness of the house, and the lack of warmth, life, and activity missing in the house.
Explanation:
The unexplained invaders are presented in opposition to the qualities of the house, as the invaders make noise and move quickly. The words in the short essay, focus the reader's attention onto ideas about emptiness, and the fear that that open, unused space can evoke.