Asked by j
Twelve voices were shouting in anger, and they were all alike. No question, now, what had happened to the faces of the pigs. The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
Which details in this passage are the best examples of satire? Select three options.
the animals waiting patiently outside
the pigs shouting angrily at the humans
the pigs and humans being indistinguishable
the animals watching the pigs and humans
the 12 voices all sounding alike
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Selected options:
- the pigs shouting angrily at the humans
- the pigs and humans being indistinguishable
- the 12 voices all sounding alike
Brief reasons:
- The pigs shouting angrily at the humans shows the rulers adopting the hostile behavior of the former oppressors, a satirical reversal of the revolution’s ideals.
- The pigs and humans being indistinguishable is the central satirical point: revolutionary leaders become the same as the tyrants they overthrew.
- The twelve voices all sounding alike emphasizes that different leaders behave identically, mocking the emptiness of political change and the corruption of power.
- the pigs shouting angrily at the humans
- the pigs and humans being indistinguishable
- the 12 voices all sounding alike
Brief reasons:
- The pigs shouting angrily at the humans shows the rulers adopting the hostile behavior of the former oppressors, a satirical reversal of the revolution’s ideals.
- The pigs and humans being indistinguishable is the central satirical point: revolutionary leaders become the same as the tyrants they overthrew.
- The twelve voices all sounding alike emphasizes that different leaders behave identically, mocking the emptiness of political change and the corruption of power.
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