Her complaints about her misdiagnosis started as a private email that went viral and she was jailed after losing a civil defamation suit taken by the hospital in 2009.
I would argue that the character of the young Daisy Miller was an innocent flirt rather than a manipulator. She was full of life, of freedom, of sincerity, and of grace, and she was beautiful, carefree, charming, and certainly ahead of her time, but she was far from being a manipulator. She had "a great deal of gentlemen's society," as she herself pointed out, but she was unpretentious, "unsophisticated," and "completely uncultivated," as Winterbourne described her, so it is possible to say that she acted naturally, not in a manipulative way.
This can also be confirmed in the passage that narrates the moment when they both met: "... (Daisy) was a coquette; he was sure she had a spirit of her own; but in her bright, sweet, superficial little visage there was no mockery, no irony." This, once again, indicates that she was honest and straightforward, and far from Machiavellian.
Answer:
where’s the advertisement
Explanation:
I’ll edit my answer when I have a valid question
Bandwagon propaganda is where everyone else is doing so you HAVE to
testimonial is a famous person in an AD
I dont know what Card Folding it
Plain folks is Idk
If I have to choose its Bandwagon
Adverb for sure as mighty often refers to being strong and fierce and can only really be used to describe a movement like a mighty punch BUT it can be an adjective as mighty may be used as a mighty man etc.