Answer:
Active
Explanation:
It expresses the verb in the beginning.
A sample of a scene from a fictional talent show in which two contestants swap bodies is:
Mary: *shouts in horror* What!!!! *looks into the mirror again* This cannot be me!
Angel: *shouts from the other room* Why do I have the face of Mary
Mary: Ahhhh!!! What is happening to me? Why do I have the face of Angel?
<h3>What is Brainstorming?</h3>
This refers to the stage of pre-writing where an author or writer thinks about ideas he would use to write a story and the plot, themes, characterization, etc.
Hence, we can see that a sample has been given to you above to get the idea on how to write the other two scenes of a fictional talent show in which two contestants swap bodies.
Read more about brainstorming here:
brainly.com/question/797047
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Answer:
because they both have a h
Explanation:
This is mostly an opinion piece, so whatever side you choose make sure to provide reasoning (this can be ethos, pathos, or logos). If your not sure what side to choose, do some research first.
<h2 /><h2>Thesis</h2>
Complex sentence(s) answering all parts of the prompt briefly. Max 3 sentences. This should come AFTER background information on your topic. So in this case, provide a few details about crime, facial recognition, and public involvement/response that align with your thesis (answer to all prompt questions). As long as you answer the question in a "introduction" and list reasons in "body paragraphs", you will do great!
<h2>What are ethos, pathos, and logos?</h2>
The three artistic proofs!
LOGOS - appeal to logic and reasoning
Evokes a rational response. Readers get a sense of, "Oh, that makes sense"
- A FACT is something that can be proven true
- <u>A STATISTIC is numerical fact/data/percentages</u>
- <u>CAUSE/EFFECT is the way a writer shows relationships</u>
- <u>An EXAMPLE is a scenario or situation </u>
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ETHOS - appeal to ethics and morals
Helps reader to see the author as reliable, trustworthy, competent., and credible. The reader might respect the author or his/her views.
- <u>Expert Witness</u>
- Celebrity Quote (written or spoken)
- <u>Quote from a well-known and reliable source</u>
- <u>Anything else that may suggest something is right/wrong or moral/immoral</u>
PATHOS - appeal to emotions and psychological response
Evokes an emotional response. Persuasion by emotion.
- <u>Emotionally loaded language</u>
- <u>Vivid descriptions </u>
- Emotional examples
- <u>Anecdotes, testimonies, or narratives about emotional experiences or events</u>
- Figurative language
- <u>Emotional tone (humor, sarcasm, disappointment, excitement, etc.) </u>
The author might be implying that his dog allowed his worries to scatter free. Or his dog may have given him comfort and made him for relaxed; not thinking about his stress or his worries.