Your answer is "Poor little thing!" he cried, as he sprang up; you too are shut within this terrible prison. This thick darkness must be as hard for you to bear as it is for me.". I meant C #EDITED
I usually don't explain but here: So A is eliminated because it is not even talking about the prison, B is talking about it but I will come back to it, but C. C is talking about just a iron door shut, It can be from anywhere not only prisons have that so that is out and we are left with D, well we also have B too on the side so lets check out D. read from top... So it is talking about the prison and how it is in it but also it is DETAILED, Yes it is talking about him sprang up and talking about thick darkness, So I would choose D. WAIT I got it wrong it is C i did not see the for shadowing part very sorry. Lol My Bad EDITED
Its A. IF YALL DONT KNOW THE ANSWER DONT POST. THE CORRECT ANSWER IS A
Germany has sunk sea vessels regardless of the vessel's nationality. This was critical point that made Woodrow Wilson to support USA's participation at war. Germany made act that shouldn't stay unanswered.
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.