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Which answer best describes the theme of the following passage? And if you say "fission chips," we'll give you half credit. The AP test graders mig...
AP English Language and Composition 3.5 Passage Drill. How is "forcible" being used here?
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AP English Language and Composition 2.10 Passage Drill 458 Views
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Description:
In this AP Language and Composition drill question, read the provided passage and infer information based upon footnote two.
Transcript
- 00:00
Edited at https://subtitletools.com
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by traitors.
- 00:07
They may be banned from the kingdom, but they can always open a "Traitor Joe's."
- 00:11
Yeah, like that.
Full Transcript
- 00:13
All right, check out the following passage.
- 00:14
How many times have we read this? Like 1800 times.
- 00:17
We're scrolling...
- 00:18
[ mumbles ]
- 00:27
Are you incredibly bored reading this?
- 00:29
No, you're fascinated by the debauchery.
- 00:31
[ mumbles ]
- 00:35
All right, well you really wanted to read it again. Go ahead.
- 00:37
Hurt yourself.
- 00:38
We can't stop you.
- 00:41
[ mumbles ]
- 00:44
And a whole bunch of footnotes.
- 00:45
Footnotes, footnotes, footnotes.
- 00:47
Brought to you by Dr. Scholl's.
- 00:59
Okay, you're done.
- 01:00
It can be assumed from footnote two that... what?
- 01:05
And here are the potential answers. [multiple choice answers appear on screen]
- 01:07
[ mumbles ]
- 01:13
Okay, and we're done.
- 01:14
So this question is directing us right to footnote two,
- 01:17
so let's just go there.
- 01:19
All right, so let's see.
- 01:20
So this Varney guy told some fella named Hyde that
- 01:23
he followed the king because honour
- 01:26
- spelled with a U, those silly Brits -
- 01:28
obliged him. But the object of the war was
- 01:30
against his conscience.
- 01:32
In other words, his heart wasn't totally into the war,
- 01:35
but it was his king after all.
- 01:37
So he kinda had to get in there and
- 01:39
mix it up anyway. [Varney holding weapon goes to war]
- 01:40
Then we've got this Lord Spencer writing to his lady.
- 01:44
Well, "If there could be an expedient found to salve
- 01:47
the punctilio of honour, I would not continue here an hour."
- 01:51
All right, well, we're not sure what "punctilio" is,
- 01:54
but it's probably some form of pasta.
- 01:57
Sarcasm.
- 01:57
Anyway, the gist of it is that if Spencer could
- 02:00
find a way to get around the whole honour thing, [Spencer writing]
- 02:03
well, he'd be out of there in a New York minute.
- 02:06
So Varney and Spencer seem to be on the same page, at least.
- 02:10
Neither is gung-ho about the war, but they're both gonna
- 02:12
follow the king in spite of their personal feelings because, [Varney and Spener holding weapons go to war]
- 02:15
well, they're honorable. Stupid honor.
- 02:17
Huh. All right, well, looking over our answer choices,
- 02:20
there's no mention of memoirs or religion, so
- 02:22
B and E are out. We've decided they're coming from the same
- 02:25
place, so it can't be C. And there's no evidence to support
- 02:29
D, so that's a no-go, as well.
- 02:31
So it looks like we're stuck with A -
- 02:32
Sir Varney and Lord Spencer both enlisted to fight on behalf of the king.
- 02:36
And, sure enough, that was pretty much our conclusion.
- 02:38
So answer A it is.
- 02:39
Or, as the British would probably spell it, "A - U."
- 02:44
Au.
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