Brutus is worried about his public duty and is prepared to act for the common good of Rome. Brutus uses his patriotism and his love for Rome to move the crowd to support the brutal murder of Caesar Brutus' speech starts of with reason and order, he tells the crowd to “censure me in your wisdom, and awake your senses”.
Marc Antony's rhetorical address to the Roman people is a persuasive argument against Brutus and the other conspirators, an address that discredits them. Rather than acting nobly, Antony argues, the assassins killed <u>Julius Caesar</u> in order to gain the power for themselves. With verbal irony, Antony repeatedly refers to Brutus as "an honorable man" and states that the "ambition" of which Caesar has been accuses should have been made "of sterner stuff." With dramatic irony, it is later discovered that Antony himself covets power and is, himself, most ambitious. For, he incites the crowd to civil war by telling them that Caesar loved them and left money for them in his will, suggesting that Brutus and the others were going to keep this money.
Hope this helps;)
It is necessary to include a citation when you are quoting something from a text in an article or book and you also include a citation when you get a quote off of a website. Anything that is not your words needs to be cited correctly.
Your answer should be D) Figurative because its describing metaphorically and departing literal use of words.
Answer:
Extravagant hypothesis.
Explanation:
Fallacies represent the error/flaw in reasoning that spoils the validity of the argument. An extravagant hypothesis is a kind of fallacy that occurs when an exaggerated or unlikely explanation or comparison is provided unnecessarily where a simpler or less elaborate description could work more efficiently. <em>Similarly, this example proposes an extravagant comparison(with 'aliens') that represents a flaw in logical reasoning(comparison here) </em>that neglects the effectiveness of the intended meaning. Thus, it exemplifies the 'extravagant hypothesis' fallacy.
Answer:
There are 1,187,049 mountains in the world!