0
Jeff_999 Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

A famous quote

0 “Politics, as a practice, 01i00 whatever its professions 02i00, has always been the systematic organization of hatreds.” 02br
02br
00I don’t know why “whatever its professions” sounds a little awkward to me. I think there should be something omitted, like the verb. It should be “whatever its professions are”. 02br
02br
00Besides, I don’t get what exactly “professions” means. It means “declarations”? 02br
02br
02br
00If there is a sentence completion question like this: 02br
00It has been argued that politics as___, whatever its professionals, has always been the systematic organization of common hatreds. 02br
00A. a theory B. an ideal C. a practice D. a contest E. an enigma 02br
02br
00Could you tell me what makes C right? In other words, What is it based on that you choose C? 02br
02br
00Thank you! 0-
  

Top answer

0politics is... ) is an ideal, a theory, etc. (whatever that is) this is grammar!

  • 0politics is...
  • ) is an ideal, a theory, etc.
  • (whatever that is) this is grammar!
  • and forget about peace treaties...
  • maybe?
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
0politics is... politicians are...Politics (as a noun in the singular form must respect the rule and therefor is...) is an ideal, a theory, etc. (whatever that is) this is grammar! 02br
02br
00the quote itself speaks about one shread of thruth of the reality of nowadays because is based on whatever made the quote exist...reality.What I mean is, can you think of one example wh

Related Questions