资源描述:
《最新Love-Is-a-Fallacy课后习题答案.docx》由会员上传分享,免费在线阅读,更多相关内容在教育资源-天天文库。
1、精品资料Love-Is-a-Fallacy课后习题答案........................................精品资料Ⅱ. B. Questions on Structure and Style: 1. The purpose of this essay is to demonstrate that logic, far from being a dry, pedantic subject, is a living, breathing thing, full of beauty, pass
2、ion, and trauma. Logic may be an interesting subject. The writer is exaggerating for the sake of humor. The writer employs a whole variety of writing techniques to make his story vivid, dramatic and colorful. The lexical spectrum is colorful from the ultra lea
3、rned terms used by the conceited narrator to the infra clipped vulgar forms of Polly Espy. He uses figurative language profusely and also grammatic inversion for special emphasis. The speed of the narration is maintained by the use of short sentences, elliptic
4、al sentences and dashes throughout the story. This mix adds to the realism of the story. ........................................精品资料2. The topic sentence of paragraph 47 is : He was a torn man. The writer develops the idea expressed in the topic sentence by d
5、escribing vividly how hard it is for Petey Burch to choose between his girlfriend and raccoon coat. Being very observant and superbly to illustrative examples to develop the theme, the writer successfully to brings forth the scene in which Petey Burch’s desire
6、 for the raccoon coat waxes and his resolution not to give his girlfriend wanes. The reader can easily come to the conclusion that it is hard and painful decision for him to make. ........................................精品资料3. The narrator refers to Pygmalion
7、and Frankenstein because just as Pygmalion loved the perfect woman he fashioned, the narrator loved Polly Espy, who he had fashioned according to his plan. However, when he begged Polly’s love, he was rejected. He got same result as Frankenstein, who created a
8、 monster that destroyed him. In this sense, these allusion are chosen aptly. The whole thing backfired on the narrator when Polly employed all the “logical fallacies” she had been