Below are the answers:
The question of fact - one focal point of enticing talking. They recommend that something is a reality. In an enticing discourse, the speaker answers an inquiry by proposing an answer and endeavoring to persuade the group of onlookers that the appropriate response is valid and that they can trust the speaker.
the question of value - infer certain activities, however, they are not a suggestion to take action. Convincing talks of significant worth rely upon a judgment that something is correct or wrong, moral or indecent, or preferable or more awful over something else.
the question of policy - which advocates a change from the norm, or the way things are today. There is a "should", or if nothing else an inferred "should", in the postulation articulation. The speaker needs the arrangement proposed by the discourse to wind up approach.
Answer:
Explanation:
Shame is a social emotion, typically felt after failures, inadequacies, and moral or social transgressions (Izard, 1977. Human emotions.
Looking down instead of looking people in the eye.
Keeping your head hung low.
Slumping your shoulders instead of standing up straight.
Feeling frozen or unable to move.
Not being able to act spontaneously
Answer:
In Sudan's western Darfur region, a massive campaign of ethnic violence has claimed the lives of more than 70,000 civilians and uprooted an estimated 1.8 million more since February 2003. The roots of the violence are complex and parts of the picture remain unclear. But several key facts are now well known. The primary perpetrators of the killings and expulsions are government-backed "Arab" militias. The main civilian victims are black "Africans" from three tribes. And the crisis is currently the worst humanitarian disaster on the planet.
The bloodshed in Darfur has by now received a great deal of attention. Much of the public debate in the United States and elsewhere, however, has focused not on how to stop the crisis, but on whether or not it should be called a "genocide" under the terms of the Genocide Convention.
Answer:
Winston Smith is the the protagonist in George Orwell's dystopian novel <em>1984</em> about a <em>Totalitarian State; </em>Winston secretly dislikes the party he's afiliated to <em>(The Thought Police Party of Oceania in the novel)</em> and remains skeptical, so as he reads the book <em>"The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism"</em> supposedly writen by Emmanuel Goldstein, he obviously realizes it was not written by Goldstein but by <em>The Party</em> of Oceania.
Explanation: