the answers are the first and last option :)
Answer:
B). It emphasizes how much people prefer nature over urban settings.
Explanation:
The chapter titled 'Scientists Reveal Three Keys to Happiness' primarily discusses that <u>how nature influences people</u>. The author proves that 'some specific environments bring out the best in people' which is justified by the illustration provided in paragraph 9. It proves that the pictures displaying scenes of nature were always preferred over the 'urban scenes' despite the quality of latter was much advanced as they were clicked by professional photographers. Thus, <u>it substantiates the claim that nature always rules that gateway for people's happiness. </u>Therefore, <u>option B</u> is the correct answer.
Answer:
It is D or the last one
Explanation:
Because situational irony is irony that someone expects one thing but gets the opposite or something they didn't expect.
Hope this helps!!
I suppose the last sentence ("Hopefully...") is underlined. In my opinion, the correct answer is C. <span>It is an opinion that reflects the journalist’s bias regarding the transportation strike. The journalist is not being neutral in this sentence. He/she judges that the strike is unnecessary, which is definitely bias - the transportation workers definitely don't think it is unnecessary, and with this sentence, the journalist takes a side, which is not allowed in good journalism.</span>
Answer: The parallelism emphasizes the speaker's Irish nationality.
Excerpt that is missing: My country is Kiltartan Cross,
My countrymen Kiltartan's poor,
No likely end could bring them loss
Or leave them happier than before.
Explanation:
This poem is how an Irish soldier is feeling during World War I and about what he is thinking. Soldiers are often thinking about their home and country during the war.
- It is written by W. B. Yeats and he used parallelism in this poem to show the readers how strong and big it is soldiers' love for his Irish nationality.
We can see parallelism in "My country is Kiltartan Cross" and "My countrymen Kiltartan's poor." where he is talking about the place in Western Ireland.