Answer:
In "The Rhetorical Situation," Lloyd Bitzer notes that rhetorical constraints are "made up of persons, events, objects, and relations which are part of the [rhetorical] situation because they have the power to constrain decision or action." Sources of constraint include "beliefs, attitudes, documents, facts, tradition, image, interests, motives and the like.
Explanation:
Hope this <em><u>Helped!</u></em> :D
Answer:
2 or more individual noun phrases from one bigger noun phrase