Can you give me the link to the story please? I'll see what I can do from there.
Answer:
In order to make an ethos, or ethical, appeal, convince the audience that you are a reliable, intelligent and can be trusted. Here is how you can achieve this: Provide personal experience or know someone whose experience can relate to what you are talking about. Use detailed and recent research in your argument.
Answer:
A) Both Brutus and Antony ask rhetorical questions to make points.
Explanation:
Brutus and Antony both ask rhetorical questions. Isn't it? "Would you rather Caesar live and all slaves die than Caesar die and all free men live? ...Who is a bondman here?" Asks Antony "Did Caesar appear ambitious? Was it a goal?"
The other choices are incorrect. Brutus' ambition is not positive. He says he killed Caesar for his ambition. He probably wouldn't have killed him if he valued ambition. They didn't mention Caesar's flaws. Using the pronoun "you" directly addresses the crowd.
Answer:
The coins symbolize "People's thoughtlessness about each others' suffering"
Explanation: