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Richard Connell describes the coastline as "An unbroken front of snarled and ragged jungle..." Why does he use the word "snarled"? A. Because it reminds you of a friendly puppy. B. Because it suggests something mean and angry. C. Because it sounds nice. D. Because it suggests something complicated and challenging.

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

Richard Connell describes the coastline as “An unbroken front of snarled and ragged jungle…” Why does he use the word “snarled”?

because it reminds you of a friendly puppy

because it suggests something mean and angry

because it sounds nice

because it suggests something complicated and challenging

Step-by-step explanation:

answered
User Ktiu
by
7.7k points
4 votes
B, because snarling is not associated with something loving/nice but it also doesn't indicate something challenging. It's simply an image of something angry/evil
answered
User Sneilan
by
7.2k points
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