The statement that , "They act as if we wore our skirts too short and invited trouble, presents an effective analogy.
Explanation:
The Statement comes from the editorial written as "It’s Time for a Nation to Return the Favor
" on 20th November in the year of 2005, published in The Times-Picayune
.
The statement has been made against the people of Washington. The remark made as an analogy is represented towards the burdensome for those people who might have forgotten their status quo. the skirts is compared to that status quo where the shortness of the skirt represents the burdensome and the invited trouble represents their ill remembrance about it.
The helplessness of war
medias portrayal of war
mans capability of peace
<span>Struggles with his decision to kill the old man.
The premise of the poem revolves around the narrator's confliction over killing the man because although the man has been nothing but good to him, the strange blue eye "haunts" and annoys him.</span>
Answer:
B. to emphasize how dangerous it has become to travel
Explanation:
According to the text, A Good Man Is Hard To Find, the author introduces the grandmother with her comments about The Misfit to emphasize how dangerous it is to travel as criminals like the Misfit are everywhere.
The Misfit is a criminal who happens to meet the family after their accident. He is a frightening man.
The statement that best describes the fallacy in this passage is (A) Justice Taney assumes that the writers of the Constitution would agree with him about citizenship.
Explanation:
The term fallacy is the use to show /support a invalid o, wrong or faulty reasoning, or "a wrong move"
Justice Taney claims that black people could not become the citizens of America , even though they have gained their freedom, because the Founders of american wanted it to happen. When the constitution was written the Black people never wanted to become the citizens . In the course this statement was not true, thus it is a fallacy statement.
Thus, The statement that best describes the fallacy in this passage is (A) Justice Taney assumes that the writers of the Constitution would agree with him about citizenship.