D) Both the poem and the essay would be appropriate to include.
When trying to persuade readers, it is best to use as many rhetorical devices as possible. The rhetorical devices are ethos, pathos, and logos. Ethos is an appeal to ethics. Pathos is an appeal to emotion. And, logos is an appeal to logic. Thus, by including a poem, most likely, pathos will be included because of how poetry is emotional. Additionally, by including facts that support your ethical position of ending child labor, readers’ logical next step would be to support ending it, as well. That said, both the poem and essay would be appropriate to include.
Answer:
Dear * insert BF name,
I have known that you truanted classes yesterday/ 2 days ago/ a week ago/... Me, on one hand, know that you are tired and lazy to attend classes and I understand your opinion towards the subjects today, on the other hand, I think you should've attended at least one or two of them, Mathes and * insert the subject you think is important... ( author-chan POV : after that, you should continue writing your letter using these points:
- Tell your friend about how you felt during your classes without him/her
I recommend you tell him/her the summary of the classes you have that day, but ignore it if you are too lazy to do the part.
- tell your friend why you dont think ditching class is good, for example, 'skipping class means losing a bunch of knowledge' or write it yourself.
- at last, tell your friend to quit the idea of ditching more classes in your way. If it was me, it'll be like this:
After all the reasons I told you, I don't want you to skip class again, and I wish to see you at school after your suspended time. Please quit the idea of truanting classes ( add this if you want -> unless you want me to stop being your friend. )
Explanation:
this is hard work, I want you to offer us a bigger amount of points as a payback.
I want to go, but I have to feed my spider.
I can't afford this, could I loan some money?
Greek and Latin matter because it helps us with the pronunciation of words and the origin of words. When we know about where these words come from, how they are broken down (with suffixes and prefixes), and how each are pronounced, you better understand not only the word, but the meaning and the logic behind the word. This also aids in reading comprehension. Greek and Latin is key to understanding vocabulary, and a good vocabulary helps you to understand what you are reading.