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Rhetoric Videos 53 videos

SAT Reading 1.2 Passage Comparison
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SAT Reading: Passage Comparison Drill 1, Problem 2

SAT Reading 2.3 Passage Comparison
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SAT Reading: Passage Comparison Drill 2, Problem 3

SAT Reading 3.1 Passage Comparison
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SAT Reading: Passage Comparison Drill 3, Problem 1

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What Does "Shock the bottom out of" Mean? 2 Views


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Description:

What does "Shock the bottom out of" mean? Mark Twain uses it in the SAT Reading passage.


Transcript

00:02

okay people were continuing on with Mark Twain's a little story here of his angst

00:08

and venom of childhood in the Mississippi authors use up the phrase [text on screen]

00:12

shock at the bottom out of one sitting right there he's primarily meant to

00:14

convey the idea that what all right well the right answer here people yes it's be

00:19

Twain uses the term worldly to mean that the boy acted against the Church's

00:25

teachings yet he was rewarded with every River kids dream while Twain was left to [Kid unhappy on the shore]

00:30

you know high and dry ashore there it was to him the definition of unfair

00:35

because all Twain's good behavior had gotten him was a whole lot of nothing [empty present bag]

00:39

tough break there Marky well the success of his old mate actually makes Twain's

00:44

prospects seem a bit brighter so get rid of a in fact it inspires Twain and all

00:48

the local boys to look for steamboat work there's no mention of any further [text on screen]

00:52

connection to his father so yeah get rid of see their employment and lastly

00:56

surviving an explosion makes the boy a town hero which makes the danger all the

01:01

more appealing to Twain and the other boys so get rid of B because ya boys are

01:06

immortal

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