Answer:
The option that best describes how Anaya effectively uses rhetoric in the excerpt to convince readers that his conclusion is justified is:
B) Anaya establishes his credibility as a published Chicano author by discussing his career experience.
Explanation:
Rhetoric concerns the use of devices and strategies to convince the audience of your opinion or perspective. A commonly efficient way to do so is by establishing your own credibility concerning the subject. That is what Anaya is doing in this excerpt. He gets to talk about language and culture in American literature, and be taken seriously while doing it, due to his credibility as a published Chicano author. His life and career are devoted and dependent on this subject, which gives him some sort of authority to discuss it.
Mutability is a poem written in 1816 by Percy Bysshe Shelley. He was a poem writer from the Romantic period. The term mutability refers to changes, so, it is probable that Shelley wanted to express the idea that people do not have complete power over the changes or mutations that might occur in their lives. During the poem, the writer uses a variety of literary devices to express his ideas. He also employs a sombre tone.
Shelley wrote 'Mutability' at a particular moment in his life. He wrote it in 1816 when his first child Mary was born. That made it even more significant for him. During the same year he also experience two difficult moments, financial problems and the suicide of his wife. All these events influenced the poem.
Answer:absolutely.yeah thats similar...
Explanation:
<span>Rev. Hale. He wants to save their lives.</span>
The correct answer is option letter B (logos). Taken from <em>the United States Declaration of Independence</em> (1776) written by Thomas Jefferson, the excerpt presented above is an example of <u>the use of logos</u>, a literary device that can be an argument or a statement used to convince or persuade the targeted audience. These lines are part of <u>the second part</u> of the Declaration of Independence and here the author explains to the audience <u>why the colonies wanted to separate</u> and <u>all the transgressions the British government made against the colonists</u>.