The excerpt from <span>"The Enigma Machine” that supports the idea that Allied forces expected the Germans to complicate their coding system is the following: </span>
"The Germans
knew their enemies were listening to their secret radio com<span>munications,
but they were confident their messages were undecipherable.</span>
The ENIGMA
machine so enciphered the messages that the Germans assumed <span>the contents
could be deciphered only by duplicate ENIGMA's set according </span><span>to precise and frequently changed settings."</span>
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Answer:
The correct answers are the following
1. B - [S]ince my photograph was as widely distributed as my publisher could make it, I would find it impossible to move about without being recognized.
2. A - I took one companion on my journey - an old French gentleman poodle known as Charley.
3. D - To enterain people with the unusual sights.
Explanation:
One of the problems noted by John Steinbeck during his roadtrip was precisely that his fame made it almost impossible to move about and to know America at a personal level because he was widely recognized.
Steinbeck travelled with Charley, his wife's 10-year-old French poodle, which he decided to bring with him at the last minute.
In this travelogue, Steinbeck provides descriptions of gorgeous landscapes of America, the country he devoted to know on a personal level. The use of these descriptive elements presents the reader with an unusual sight that keeps him or her engaged with the book.
Answer:
Onomatopoeia is the correct answer.
Explanation:
In the excerpt from "Safari Day in Kenya," the author uses a rhetorical device called onomatopoeia, which recreates the sounds of something, usually related to nature. Through this device, the speaker recreates hippos and baboons sounds through the word selection.