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What is ironic about the lines above? They are being said by a violent thief threating others with automatic rifles. The violence is actually worse now that the war is over. During the war, the violence was committed by people. Now, it is commited by nature. Violence is encouraged in Nigerian culture, so it would exist both in war and during peace.

User Steakpi
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2 Answers

10 votes

Answer:

a on edge2020

Step-by-step explanation:

got it right

User Jorge Sawyer
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This question is missing the excerpt. I've found it online. Since the options are the same, I will omit them:

Read the selection below from "Civil Peace" by Chinua Achebe and answer the question that follows.

"Awrighto. Now make we talk business. We no be bad tief. We no like for make trouble. Trouble done finish. War done finish and all the katakata wey de for inside. No Civil War again. This time na Civil Peace. No be so?"

What is ironic about the lines above?

Answer:

What is ironic about the lines above is:

A. They are being said by a violent thief threatening others with automatic rifles.

Step-by-step explanation:

The story "Civil Peace" by Chinua Achebe revolves around Jonathan Iwegbu, a resilient and optimistic survivor of the Civil War in Nigeria. The passage we are analyzing here takes place when Jonathan and his family are being robbed. Those lines are said by the leader of the thieves, and they are quite ironic. He claims that the war is in the past, that the violence is finished. However, what he and the other thieves are doing - robbing someone and threatening them with guns - is and act of violence. Even if they do not kill anyone, violence is still intrinsic to their actions. For that reason, we can choose letter A as the best option: They are being said by a violent thief threatening others with automatic rifles.

User Fruzer
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