Asked by KJ
I recently walked into a local café and noticed a large sign advertising the virtues of the food that was served there. The sign boasted that the tasty choices were high in fiber, a good source of vitamins, and contained no artificial sweeteners. The ad seemed reasonable; after all, fiber and vitamins are good and artificial sweeteners are bad, right? As I thought about it, though, I considered that I did not know a great deal about artificial sweeteners. I decided to do some research, and what I found surprised me.In paragraph 1, the author uses the words virtues and boasted to describe the café's advertising sign. Such word choices suggest that the author views the cafe's attitude as
cleverly humorous.
morally superior.
scientifically accurate.
casually inviting.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
morally superior.
Explanation: The words "virtues" and "boasted" imply the café is claiming moral or ethical goodness and bragging about it, not necessarily being humorous, scientifically precise, or simply inviting.
Explanation: The words "virtues" and "boasted" imply the café is claiming moral or ethical goodness and bragging about it, not necessarily being humorous, scientifically precise, or simply inviting.
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