Yes there was many things us could have done to avoid the war but they refused to let communism spread
Answer:
The Purpose of Mortimer's writing style is to help the reader to have a clear understanding of the customs, lifestyle, and practices of Elizabethan life. Mortimer's writing style can help the reader to understand more clearly what the landscapes, the streets, towns, theater look like during the period of Elizabeth 1.
Explanation:
Answer:
A)
On superficial structure level the speaker of the poem " The Parrot in the Cage" is parrot himself. On deep structure level, it is the poet himself or any modern day human being.
B)
The parrot calls himself twice born because he has seen two completely different lives. He was born free, first in the forest, and he was born caged second time.
Explanation:
On deep structure level the poet is talking about himself or any modern day human being who is caged by his social duties to work and earn more and more. Man has to do things which he does not like, to perform even when he/she is tired.
Two different lives of the caged parrot are before and after being caught in the cage. One when he was totally free in the forests, could eat, drink, chatter, fly and do whatever and whenever he liked. The other life started when he was caged and now can not fly, can not drink cool waters from rivers, can not enjoy fresh and delicious fruits hanging on the forest trees.
These two lives of parrot can also be compared with man's life when he was a child and was free, and as an adult he has been caged by social duties and bound to please his master/boss.
Similarly, we can interpret these two lives as the lives of human beings in old times and in modern times. In old times human being were mostly free and did whatever pleased them, but in modern times, human beings have to work too much to earn more and more to please the society. Man is not man anymore, he has become a machine.
Answer:
C. Nominal Scale
Explanation:
A Nominal Scale is a measurement scale, in which numbers serve as “tags” or “labels” only, to identify or classify an object.