This is an argument, because Obama is striving to prove that America needs a new strategy for energy. In this argument he uses logos when he gives the audience specific statistics to support his point. He also uses pathos when he appeals to the emotions of the audience, the emotion of hope for a brighter and cleaner future.
I took the liberty to correct your typing. The original question does not have the verb "is" after the word "brother". The way you typed it, none of the options would be correct. The proper question is this one:
<em>Which sentence is punctuated correctly?
</em>
<em>A) My brother a truck driver, spends a great deal of time on the road. </em>
<em>B) My brother, a truck driver spends a great deal of time on the road. </em>
<em>C) My brother, a truck driver, spends a great deal of time on the road. </em>
<em>D) My brother, a truck, driver spends a great deal of time on the road.</em>
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The sentence that is punctuated correctly is option C) My brother, a truck driver, spends a great deal of time on the road. The structure "a truck driver" is an appositive. That means its function in this sentence is to give further information or an explanation about something that was just mentioned - in this case, the word brother. The speaker is explaining that his/her brother spends a lot of time on the road because he is a truck driver. Appositives should come between commas. That's why option C is the right one.
Academic integrity refers to the ethical policies and moral code employed in the academic world by all members – the students and the teachers. So as we saw previously in this integrity essay, it involves being honest and doing the right thing even if you get no recognition for doing so. It involves being honest and correct when no one is watching.
Explanation:
Aesop was an ancient Greek fabulist, or writer/teller of fables. Fables are very short stories, often only one paragraph long, that are designed to teach a moral, or lesson, about how to live a good life to the reader or listener. Fables typically feature animals or inanimate objects as characters, although the characters are anthropomorphized, or given human qualities, such as the ability to speak. Aesop lived around 600 B.C.E., and was a slave. It is not clear whether Aesop was a real, individual person, and he never wrote his fables down himself; he was an oral storyteller instead. However, over the centuries, other people wrote down collections of fables attributed to Aesop, and these fables remain some of the most well-known and celebrated today. Aesop was the author of ''The Ant and the Grasshopper'' fable, as well as other famous fables, such as ''The Tortoise and the Hare'' and ''The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing.'' Aesop's fables often include a clearly spelled out moral at the end, stating in no uncertain terms what the educational point of the story was. However, this is not always included, and sometimes readers are left to interpret the moral for themselves. The moral of fables is typically not too difficult to decipher, though, since the main point of these stories is to convey a moral.
B. caught at the office
A phrase is not a sentence and can't stand alone. Caught at the office can't stand alone as a sentence; it is a <u>participial</u> phrase because it consists of a participle (<em>caught</em>) and a prepositional phrase (<em>at the office</em>).