Question
impossibility, the attempt to make both ends meet....
This does not happen every day, I admit, but there is a sensation in the back of the mind of nearly every motorist which is more or less constant. You know that you worry when the car does not go. There is no ground for speculation upon this point. You worry about what the matter is, and when you find you can't mend it, and take it to a garage to be repaired, you worry as to whether you have taken it to the right garage, or the right man in the garage. You fuss over the cost and you continually wonder whether the repairs have been properly done or whether the blamed thing won't break out in the same place the
Reread the paragraph that starts on page 5 and ends on page 6. How does this paragraph relate to the passage overall?
It uses a persuasive tone to encourage others to sell their cars.
It creates irony when the author still thinks about cars and their problems despite having sold his.
It indicates why the narrator did not want to purchase a car originally.
It reflects on a problem with car ownership that the narrator no longer has. impossibility, the attempt to make both ends meet....
This does not happen every day, I admit, but there is a sensation in the back of the mind of nearly every motorist which is more or less constant. You know that you worry when the car does not go. There is no ground for speculation upon this point. You worry about what the matter is, and when you find you can't mend it, and take it to a garage to be repaired, you worry as to whether you have taken it to the right garage, or the right man in the garage. You fuss over the cost and you continually wonder whether the repairs have been properly done or whether the blamed thing won't break out in the same place the
Reread the paragraph that starts on page 5 and ends on page 6. How does this paragraph relate to the passage overall?
It uses a persuasive tone to encourage others to sell their cars.
It creates irony when the author still thinks about cars and their problems despite having sold his.
It indicates why the narrator did not want to purchase a car originally.
It reflects on a problem with car ownership that the narrator no longer has.next time you take the car out. And during this whole period you feel in the bottom of your heart that you could have mended it just as well yourself.
This does not happen every day, I admit, but there is a sensation in the back of the mind of nearly every motorist which is more or less constant. You know that you worry when the car does not go. There is no ground for speculation upon this point. You worry about what the matter is, and when you find you can't mend it, and take it to a garage to be repaired, you worry as to whether you have taken it to the right garage, or the right man in the garage. You fuss over the cost and you continually wonder whether the repairs have been properly done or whether the blamed thing won't break out in the same place the
Reread the paragraph that starts on page 5 and ends on page 6. How does this paragraph relate to the passage overall?
It uses a persuasive tone to encourage others to sell their cars.
It creates irony when the author still thinks about cars and their problems despite having sold his.
It indicates why the narrator did not want to purchase a car originally.
It reflects on a problem with car ownership that the narrator no longer has. impossibility, the attempt to make both ends meet....
This does not happen every day, I admit, but there is a sensation in the back of the mind of nearly every motorist which is more or less constant. You know that you worry when the car does not go. There is no ground for speculation upon this point. You worry about what the matter is, and when you find you can't mend it, and take it to a garage to be repaired, you worry as to whether you have taken it to the right garage, or the right man in the garage. You fuss over the cost and you continually wonder whether the repairs have been properly done or whether the blamed thing won't break out in the same place the
Reread the paragraph that starts on page 5 and ends on page 6. How does this paragraph relate to the passage overall?
It uses a persuasive tone to encourage others to sell their cars.
It creates irony when the author still thinks about cars and their problems despite having sold his.
It indicates why the narrator did not want to purchase a car originally.
It reflects on a problem with car ownership that the narrator no longer has.next time you take the car out. And during this whole period you feel in the bottom of your heart that you could have mended it just as well yourself.
Answers
GPT-5 mini
It reflects on a problem with car ownership that the narrator no longer has.
The paragraph describes the persistent worry about breakdowns and repairs—a burden the narrator emphasizes as part of owning a car—and the passage overall contrasts that annoyance with the relief he feels after no longer owning the car.
The paragraph describes the persistent worry about breakdowns and repairs—a burden the narrator emphasizes as part of owning a car—and the passage overall contrasts that annoyance with the relief he feels after no longer owning the car.