Answer:
Proper Nouns: specific names for a person (e.g. Riley), place (e.g. White House), thing, or idea.
Common Nouns: a person, place, thing, or idea that has a generic (unspecific) name
Explanation:
Answer:
Helmer acts kindly toward Mrs. Linde while she is present, but insults her when she leaves.
Explanation:
In Henrik Ibsen's realism play "A Doll's House", the main and also recurring theme is that of appearance and reality. The very case of the two conflicting themes is played out in the character of Helmer.
Helmer is the husband of our protagonist Nora. He seems to be the type of man who wants to have full authority over his wife and children. He admonishes Nora even when she wants to buy something for herself. One of the most prominent cases of his contrasting characters is in Act 3 where he acts all so good and gentlemanly with Mrs. Linde, a friend of Nora. She had been waiting for them the whole time they had gone dancing upstairs. But once she leaves, he remarks "<em>at last we have got rid of her. She is a frightful bore, that woman</em>". This shows his differing appearances of when in public and in private.
Answer:
Pathos.
Explanation:
Aristotle's text Rhetoric primarily discusses the 'art of persuasive speech.' He offered three distinct modes of persuasion namely ethos, pathos, and logos that the authors can employ to convince their audience in various ways. Ethos stands for 'an ethical appeal that persuades the audience ethically' while 'logos' aim to convince them logically and 'Pathos' is demonstrated as the appeal that convinces the audience by eliciting their emotions. the author employs descriptive language to arouse the audience's emotions and elicit the desired response and acceptance from them.