Greek lesson time! (Well, not really. The words are so commonly used it might as well be considered English now.) Anyway, let’s examine what each of these terms means. Aristotle referred to orators when he spoke about persuasion, so let’s assume that there is some random anonymous speaker anxiously standing nearby who I will refer to.
Ethos pertains to the credibility of the speaker.
Pathos refers to the emotional appeal of the speaker.
Logos concerns the logic of the speaker.
But how does web design relate to all of this? Well, a website, much like our random, anxious, anonymous, and non-existent orator, is a communication vessel. Now let’s look at ethos, pathos, and logos again and translate them into web design speak.
Answer:
I don't know if you still need this but I thought it'd be fun to write anyway.
<em>I think that that writing is emotional</em>
<em>it is always new, always different</em>
<em>As long as it tells a story</em>
<em>Sometimes I feel more indifferent</em>
<em>When there's no theme.</em>
<em>When the event is insignificant.</em>
<em>I think writing is beautiful</em>
<em>Sometimes makes me incoherent</em>
<em>Because it's magnificent</em>
<em />
Don't know if this helps, the instructions were kind of unclear, but hoped this helped!
<em>Stay cold, </em>
<em>Brook</em>
In the lines from Shakespeare's "The Tragedy of Macbeth," Lady Macbeth is talking to herself while she is sleep walking. She feels so guilty that she cannot sleep properly. In that respect, she means that she and Macbeth do not need to fear anything because they are so powerful that nobody will believe they are responsible for killing Duncan. However, she does not actually think so - she is only trying to convince herself of it because she is under the impression that everybody is suspicious of Macbeth.
The correct answer is credible