I cannot help you with that since I do not know what "passage 1" is referring to. Nor the underlined sentences on page 3-4. Include the literacy text.
Answer:
I called her many times <u>but</u> she didn’t answer the phone.
Explanation:
hope this helps you!!
In chapters 3 and 4, education is shown as the most powerful weapon to do good and evil, and the "hunger to learn" is developed through the need to stay safe.
<h3>What does education represent in "Animal Farm?"</h3>
- The Liberty.
- The power.
- The control.
- The leadership.
- The security.
- The comfort.
Education allows animals to have a developed intellect and to be able to use it for their own benefit. In this concept, the pigs, in "Animal Farm," represent those who had more access to education, had a developed intellect and achieved control of all animals.
Horses, which are the least educated animals, are exploited and deceived by pigs, which shows that lack of education oppresses, imprisons, and limits individuals.
More information about "Animal Farm" at the link:
brainly.com/question/10225473
Not really. But the part "blacks blast browns and browns shutting your town" is..
The use of figurative language here is in the line:
They were like little flags, waving all about the class, hanging from the rods of our desks
Explanation:
The line here that shows the use of figurative language makes a comparison between the lines of words in French and their associations and they are compared to flags that are posted onto the rods of the desk of the classroom.
In this story Mr Hamel has his last class with the French kids and so the kids understand that it is the last time probably they will ever study the mother tongue.
Thus, every word of it becomes significant like a flag that is posted upon their desk, as if to show its necessity.