"and he would go tot work and bore me nearly to death with some infernal reminiscence of this as long and tedious as it should be to me"
"Simon Wheeler backed me into a corner and blockaded me there with his chair, and then sat down and reeled off the monotonous narrative…"
Then there's another one when Simon talks about the frog's talents: "you never see a frog so modest and trightforward as he was, for all he was so gifted"
I hope this helps!
The question above wants to analyze your writing skill. For that reason, I can't write your email, but I'll show you how to do it.
To write an email you must pay attention to the language that must be used. Formal language should be used whenever you are going to send this email to someone who is not intimate, or when the email has a professional, academic, or any other formal nature.
As the email you are about to write will be read by your cousin, you can write it in informal and relaxed language.
<h3>Steps to write an email</h3>
- Start with a greeting, which could be "Dear Cousin."
- Write the reason why you are writing this email.
- Write whether or not you will be able to attend the party.
- If you can't make it, explain why and apologize.
- If you can make it, show how excited you are about this event.
- Say goodbye cordially.
More information on how to write an email at the link:
brainly.com/question/25014341
Answer:
Ontario elementary and secondary students will not be returning to class in-person anywhere in the province before September 2021, Premier Doug Ford confirmed Wednesday. ... “No one wants kids back in school more than I do,” Ford said Wednesday afternoon.
Though a bit lengthy (which is absolutely fine!) you seem to go into some good detail while withholding main points for the rest of your paper and it is very well done!
Here's the criteria for Persuasive:
May make claims based on opinion. May not take opposing ideas into account.
Persuades by appealing to the audience’s emotion or by relying on the character or credentials of the writer – less on the merits of his or her reasons and evidence. Emotion-based.
I believe he's using mostly persuasive reasoning.
Here's the criteria for Argumentative reasoning:
Makes claims based on factual evidence. Makes counter-claims. The author takes opposing views into account. Neutralizes or "defeats" serious opposing ideas. Convinces audience through the merit and reasonableness of the claims and proofs offered. (I only see use of the first and last one, not 2nd or 3rd one). Here's a link for your reference. You can do a google search on persuasive vs argumentative.
Often compares texts or ideas to establish a position.
Logic based.