Answer:
The question is incomplete. The editorial cartoon image is lacking. Here is the image the question's referring to.
The details that best support the purpose of this editorial cartoon are:
- the "will work for air conditioning" sign
- the rat sweating on the sidewalk
- the comfortable man in the air-conditioned car
Explanation:
There are a number of details to consider in the editorial cartoon to understand its message. It includes the man holding the sign, the rat, and the man riding in an air-conditioned car.
But, if you look closely, Signe Wilkinson signed this on 7-6-2010 for the Philadelphia Daily News. It is better to know this date and place. But what is its importance? <em><u>During this time, the Philadelphia set a new record regarding heatwave. The temperature reached 103 degrees breaking the old record of 98 degrees in 1994. </u></em>
Climate change and global warming clearly affect people in the middle class or the working class who cannot afford to buy an air-conditioned car. And they are willing to work on breathing cold air. It also displays that not only humans are affected by a heatwave, but also animals, thus, the sweating rat.
<em><u>During this time, in 2010, people have died because of the heatwave. And the air conditioning business was booming because of in-demand repairs. </u></em>
Answer:
These word choices highlight the tone of irony.
Explanation:
The question above is about the poem "War is Kind" written by Stephen Crane. The entire poem has a strong tone of verbal irony, which can first be found in the poem speaker's statements about why women should not cry because the men they love were killed in war, because war is a good and benevolent thing. This characteristic of war contains strong irony, since nothing good and benevolent would kill anyone.
Verbal irony is reinforced by the use of contradictory ideas like those found in the question above, where the author mixes the characteristics that war promoters impose on themselves and the real characteristics among them.
B and C seem like they are just giving information about the question, instead of answering it. A seems like a legitimate answer
Mostly he babbled instructions to a tree, thinking it was his assistant Percy Weasley, but then, his Imperius curse wearing off, he stammered that he has to see Dumbledore. (GoF28 'The Madness of Mr. Crouch', pp. 553-556). I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Leave my loneliness unbroken! quit the bust above my door! Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door!" That line shows that the speaker has lost hope of ever being able to move on and recover from the pain of losing Lenore.