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AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 2. What is the speaker's primary purpose in using onomatopoeia in line four?
AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 7. What is the principal rhetorical function of paragraphs one to three?
AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill 1, Problem 8. The quotation marks in the third paragraph chiefly serve to what?
AP English Language and Composition 8.8 Passage Drill 176 Views
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Description:
AP English Language and Composition 8.8 Passage Drill. In the context of the passage, the phrase "profession of equality" refers to what?
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak in and here's your shmoop du
- 00:05
jour brought to you by jane austen's pride and prejudice
- 00:08
or is it would be known today The rial wannabe
- 00:10
housewives have hurt furred shire Yeah this question centers online
- 00:15
Seventy of the passage line seventy right there All right
Full Transcript
- 00:21
question is in the context of this passage the phrase
- 00:25
profession of equality refers to what and hear the potential
- 00:30
answer right and believe republicans egalitarian All right well in
- 00:35
eighteen thirty two a class system was still firmly in
- 00:37
place in the british isles A person regardless of how
- 00:40
awesome and smart they were could never truly change the
- 00:43
social class they were born into For examples we could
- 00:47
look at pretty much anything by jane austen or if
- 00:49
we fell asleep during english class we could always tune
- 00:52
in to the latest episode of downton abbey fine show
- 00:56
Either way the point is ah person at that time
- 00:58
was born into a certain social class and was expected
- 01:00
to remain there for the rest of their lives Ouch
- 01:04
In contrast the united states was founded on the total
- 01:06
opposite the american dream baby The american dream said that
- 01:10
anyone regardless of what cards they were dealt a birth
- 01:13
could be almost anything they wanted And the american dream
- 01:16
has been true for many people like former presidents ronald
- 01:19
reagan and bill clinton who are both born poor In
- 01:22
this passage the author who surprise surprise is british sides
- 01:25
with her countrymen when it comes to the merits of
- 01:28
a class system yeah inline sixty two to sixty six
- 01:32
she sarcastically states that america will be just fine as
- 01:35
long as they can overcome the natural order of things
- 01:38
which is that god only gives good manners and great
- 01:40
talent to those of high birth and station several times
- 01:44
the author suggests that the american government has been set
- 01:47
up toe foster this so called backward american belief But
- 01:51
when she talks about this profession of equality she's referring
- 01:54
to the american belief system itself not the government we
- 01:57
know this because she never mentions anything about governor let's
- 02:00
Keep that in mind when referring back to our potential
- 02:03
answers well in line seventy two three seventy five the
- 02:05
author uses all kinds of flowery language to describe the
- 02:08
caste system that the british hold so dear Then she
- 02:12
goes on to say that if the u s decides
- 02:14
to accept this super awesome belief system they khun b
- 02:17
buds We take that to mean that when she's rallying
- 02:21
against the american profession of equality she's rallying against an
- 02:24
ethic not a document or an institution were looking at
- 02:27
our answers there's Only one that's an ethic or an
- 02:30
ideal while the other four specifically tied to a government
- 02:33
construct So yeah it's e Still we can't help but
- 02:37
wonder if this author would have changed her mind after
- 02:39
discovering facebook or using a mac both products of the 00:02:42.968 --> [endTime] american dream
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