Answer:
The first A + B, the answer is B.
The second A + B, the answer is A.
Explanation:
The Greek philosopher Aristotle teaches that writers can use three appeals to influence or persuade their audience: logos, pathos, and ethos. Logos (Logic): Writers can persuade their audience by using logical argument. Writers appeal to readers’ sense of logic by making claims and using factual evidence to support those claims.
Answer:
B) Boaz admires Ruth’s courage in coming to a land that is foreign to her.
C) Boaz respects Ruth’s character due to the sacrifices she has made to be loyal to Naomi.
Explanation:
Ruth was the daughter-in-law of a woman named Naomi whose sons had died leaving her with the two widowed wives, Ruth and Orpah. Naomi's husband Elimelek had also died so she decided to return back to her hometown of Bethlehem. But she also gave permission to the two widows to return to their own families and stay happy with them.
While Orpah left, Ruth sticks with her mother-in-law and went to Bethlehem. There, she did work, obeying whatever Naomi told her or asked her to go, collecting the leftover harvests in people's fields. In one such field, the owner Boaz came to know about her. It is after much observation that he spoke to her these given words in the passage from <u>chapter 2:11</u>. This passage reveals the <u>admiration that Boaz has for Ruth, her courage in coming to a foreign land away from her own family. It also reveals the respect that Boaz has for Ruth's character for the sacrifices she has made by being loyal to her mother-in-law Naomi.</u>
Answer:
C. The theme that trying too hard or aiming to high can cause one to fail.
Explanation:
Ovid's story of Daedalus and Icarus tells the mythical tale of an imprisoned Daedalus making wings with wax and using it to escape from the island that he and his son were kept in. Meanwhile, Pieter Bruegel's oil painting "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus" presents an image of the fall of Icarus with only his legs visible above the water while he fell from the sky, plunging head first.
In the painting, though the character of Daedalus isn't visible, the theme of trying too hard which led to the disastrous drowning is perfectly shown through the fall of Icarus. This <u>theme of aiming too high or getting greedy from the myth seems to be the common element that Bruegel retain in his painting.</u>