I would choose foreshadowing because theme is the life lesson and personification is giving human characteristics to non human things.
The above question wants to assess your ability to read, interpret and write. For that reason, it's not right for me to write down the logical analysis you need, but I'll show you how to write one.
First, you need to know that the letter Benjamin Banneker wrote to Thomas Jefferson was intended to convince him to fight for abolitionism.
That's because Benjamin Banneker had joined a group of men who were in favor of ending slavery, but he knew politically relevant men needed to join that group and support abolitionism and so he wrote the letter to Jefferson.
In this case, the entire letter shows that objective, presenting Jefferson the reasons that make abolitionism a good policy for America and the reasons that make slavery bad.
Based on this, to write your logic analysis you should:
- Read the entire text and reread if necessary.
- Start your analysis by showing what the letter is and what its main purpose is.
- Show how the author develops this goal.
- Show how the sentences the author uses to defend his position on the subject of the letter.
- Assess whether the type of language the author presented is appropriate.
- Show how the author presents slavery and ways to combat it.
- Show your opinion of the letter and the way its author approaches the subject presented.
More information:
brainly.com/question/24751035?referrer=searchResults
Answer:
A. He has to gather his courage before he is able to speak to the nose.
Explanation:
In the Nose, the strange and humorous story written by Gogol, the main character (Kovaloff) wakes up one day to find that he no longer is in possession of his own nose and, later, he finds out that the nose has been around in town and, socially, it seems to be more successful than Kovaloff himself. In the passage above, one can see that Kovaloff is intimidated by the nose since he ponders the social standing that the nose seems to have earned so quickly, and this makes him nervous and insecure, so much so that he has to gather his courage to barely mutter a few questions to it.
That's going to be a Bandwagon Appeal. An example of that would be "everyone is doing it, you should too!". Or in your case "Everyone agrees!". Your answer is Bandwagon Appeal.