Answer: A.) Comparing something that is part of nature to something that is not shows that plastic bags are a problem.
Explanation:
I got it right.
Here are the answers to the given questions above:
1. <span>Plato’s dialogues, including the Apologia, are classical texts. The answer would be option A.
2. </span>The Socratic method refers to questioning definitions of concepts expressed by people. The answer would be option C.
Hope these answer your questions.
Answer:
Astronomers are telling people to be especially watchful this evening, as a rare event could be making a very special appearance. The release of energised particles from the sun, coupled with particularly helpful overnight conditions, is predicted to make the Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis) visible much further south than normal. Interviewed earlier today by Chris Ross, Channel Six’s science correspondent, Derwent University’s Professor Andrew Higgins told her that, "It's a once-in-a-decade opportunity that people really shouldn’t miss. Thanks to several fronts of high air pressure, the skies tonight will be particularly clear. Ill is over the moon comes the dawn."
Answer:
<u><em>Judson Webb died by drinking a bottle of whiskey that contained two tablets of rat poison.</em></u><em>
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Explanation:
Ruthless is an exceptional story written by William de Mille. Judson Webb is one of the main characters of this story. The author elaborates on how Judson kills himself after he leaves his camp in the mountains.
The main theme of this story is that <em>any act of revenge has its devastating drawbacks</em>. One can not shake this feeling off and sooner or later gets punished for their wrong doings.
<em>Judson is shown to be very evil and his wife fears him.</em>
The goal of a satire is to criticize or ridicule somebody or something (an action, a situation, a behavior). For that reason, it usually features sharp and mordant ideas. In this excerpt from the <em>Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</em> by Mark Twain, Huck, the main character, is describing one of his encounters with the severe Miss Watson, his guardian's sister. In it, Miss Watson, who wants Huck to accept religion at all cost, is telling him to pray everyday, and, as a reward, he will get what he asks for. However, Huck, tired of not getting it (hooks for his fish-line), harmlessly asks Miss Watson, to her dismay, to do it for him, since, so he believes, she may be luckier and gets what he has asked for in his prayers. Miss Watson's livid reply and Huck's unaffected comment emphasize the mocking nature of the theme in this excerpt.