The answer would be anecdote. Allusion is a reference to another work. a rhetorical question is a question that requires and does not want and answer. an anecdote is a brief story designed to illustrate something. logic is how some one using reason to come to a sound/valid conclusion. A<span>n anecdote is not so strict on content. The content of the anecdote is logic reasoning. It could just as easily have been an anecdote for something like irony.</span>
Answer:
Heart- Hollow, muscular organ that pumps blood throughout the
body.
Arteries- Blood vessel that carries oxygen-rich blood away from the
heart and to the body parts.
Capillaries- Small blood vessels where materials are exchanged
between the blood and the body's cells (oxygen & carbon
dioxide)
Veins- arries oxygen-poor blood (w/carbon dioxide) back to the
heart (to be pumped out to the lungs)
Explanation:
Answer:
Antonyms: general, unspecified, gross, general-purpose, nonspecific, widespread, all-purpose, universal, generic, unspecific, pandemic, broad, overall.
Answer: What is the difference between poetry and other genres of literature?
The main difference between the different forms of literature is the purpose and the way words are arranged. The main difference between prose and poetry is how the words are used. In prose we form words into sentences and paragraphs. In poetry we form words into lines and stanzas.
Explanation: you just got this question answered by the one the only Mickey the mouse your welcome. Mark me brainlest plz.
Kennedy felt great pressure to have the United States "catch up to and overtake" the Soviet Union in the "space race." Four years after the Sputnik shock of 1957, the cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin had become the first human in space on April 12, 1961, greatly embarrassing the U.S. While Alan Shepard became the first American in space on May 5, he only flew on a short suborbital flight instead of orbiting the Earth, as Gagarin had done. In addition, the Bay of Pigs fiasco in mid-April put unquantifiable pressure on Kennedy. He wanted to announce a program that the U.S. had a strong chance at achieving before the Soviet Union. After consulting with Vice President Johnson, NASA Administrator James Webb, and other officials, he concluded that landing an American on the Moon would be a very challenging technological feat, but an area of space exploration in which the U.S. actually had a potential lead. Thus the cold war is the primary contextual lens through which many historians now view Kennedy's speech.