Answer:
Strong Words
- Marred by dust
- Strives Valiantly
- Sweat and blood
Neutral Words
- The man
- There is no effort
- Credit belongs
Explanation:
Strong words make the speakers example fill with passion and neutral words lack emotion.
Also, I got it right.
The best answer for this question would be:
someone who is loved and trusted
This connotation was “someone who is loved and trusted”
because the person who stated the line “The boy calls you father” implying that
there is a possibility that they are no related by blood; adding to that he may
call “father” for respect.
The author's shift in tone between the paragraphs was a transition between B. exemplifying simplicity and demonstrating complexity identifying problems and proposing solutions.
<h3>What is tone?</h3>
In literature, it should be noted that that a tone simply means the word choice that influences the mood in a story.
In this case, the author's shift in tone between the fourth and fifth paragraphs was a transition between exemplifying simplicity and demonstrating complexity identifying problems and proposing solutions.
Learn more about tones on:
brainly.com/question/15447799
In “America Needs Its Nerds,” by L. Fridman, addresses an issue that still exists in today's society: that students perceived as intelligent are ridiculed. In his exhortation Leonid argued that the curious and smart scholars need not to be ashamed of their intellect, and that society needs to change their attitude towards these types of people because it comes off as pessimistic. The writer combats these views with rhetoric, parallelism, and strategic diction. Early in the writing, the author writes “intellectually curious and academically serious,” which is a use of parallelism since the words are similar in its pronunciation and grammatically overall. He uses this rhetoric again in lines 20 thru 23, as he examines the stereotyping students face and are forced into, for being serious about their academics. He Mr. Firdman uses dition throughout his essay to more than likely suggest that he is or has been considered a nerd as well. His very descriptive word structure is evident throughout, with lines 20 thru 32 containing connotations and imagery to evoke pathos in the audience with words such as ‘grave’ and ‘haunt’.
Without a list composed, i cannot give a certain answer. But a question that is too narow could be like "Where does pine grow?"
Basically it would be a question that will not require too much detail.