Answer:
Organizing your speech according to topical organization means you organized your speech: <u>based on categories of information</u>.
Explanation:
<u>Categorical or topical organization is the most common one for organizing speeches. This type of organization consists in dividing the message into categories or chunks of information. These chunks are connected and function as support for the main message.</u>
Suppose you're giving a a speech with the purpose of convincing people to quit smoking. Your general purpose is to persuade. Your specific purpose statement could be something like "I will persuade the audience that smoking is unhealthy." The categories inside your main point could be:
1. number of deaths associated to smoking;
2. types of diseases associated to smoking;
3. testimonies of people who quit smoking and are healthier now.
I believe that the speaker in the ballad of Robin Hood and the Scotsman is the option 'C' - Someone who knows the story.
<span>If you read the ballad, it can be concluded that Robin Hood is on his own. Friar Tuck was not with him. This ballad is also written in the past tense so Robin Hood could not have been the narrator. One can infer that the story was of the fight was either told to the narrator of this ballad by Robin Hood himself or the Scotsman. </span>
Well in Fahrenheit 451, if they catch you taking a book home or get suspicious about you having one, you will get your house burned along with all the books.
Is there more to this question? I feel as if there isn't sufficient information.