English, asked by revargoulding, 11 months ago

Read this passage from The Phantom Tollbooth.

"My, my, my, my, my, welcome, welcome, welcome, welcome to the land of Expectations, to the land of Expectations, to the land of Expectations. We don't get many travelers these days; we certainly don't get many travelers these days. Now what can I do for you? I'm the Whether Man."

"Is this the right road for Dictionopolis?" asked Milo, a little bowled over by the effusive greeting.

Which phrase from the passage is an idiom?

"welcome, welcome"
"land of Expectations"
"the Whether Man"
"bowled over"

Answers

Answered by HumbertoFitzhugh
1

The correct answer is D.

Explanation:

The Phantom Tollbooth is a children's fiction novel written by Norton Juster and illustrated by Jules Feiffer. The novel narrates the story about the adventures of Milo into the Kingdom of  Wisdom. Milo is a young boy who gets bored and eventually enters the Kingdom of Wisdom riding on his toy car.

In the given passage, the phrase that is an idiom is "bowled over." The idiom bowled over means to get surprised or astonished, greatly surprised or overwhelmed.

Milo was astonished to receive such an effusive greeting.

Therefore, option D is correct.

Learn more:

Why is the tollbooth called a phantom tollbooth

brainly.in/question/15903945

Answered by tailynhorton
0

Answer:

Answer is d

Explanation:

My Explanation is I did the test

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