Answer:
THE DAY I MADE MY FIRST PUBLIC SPEECH
I still remember vividly the day i stood in front of over 1000 students from different schools, teachers, parents to give a speech on behalf of our science club. terrified is an understatement. i was literary shaking. at first i had refused because i had phobia for crowds. but encouragement from friends and family kept me going and regardless i made up my mind to face my fears and deliver the speech. i took in all the advise i had been given, practiced in the mirror and there i was ready to take the challenge heads on. i was supposed to be third to give my speech, and when the second speaker was called, i knew i was finished. i excused myself to go for a short call haha. it was not easy but i was going to do it anyway. when my turn reached, i stood up, opened my paper and there i was, talking and giving my speech. when i finished for a moment i couldn't believe i was the one who had just given a speech. that experience changed my personality for the better. i got to learn that fear is just an imagination of something which does not even exist. since then my public speaking skills have gone a notch higher. i am good at it and i do not hesitate whenever an opportunity presents itself.
I hope it helps!!!!!!!!!
B. Though Benjamin Franklin was known for his instrumental role in the founding of the United States.
This is a sentence fragment, you can tell because saying the sentence in your head or out loud feels incomplete, that is because the sentence wasn't finished, for example, "Though Benjamin Franklin was known for his instrumental role in the founding of the United States, he had many other accomplishments." Is a full sentence.
the use of a rhetorical question advances the author's purpose of showing that all people deserve freedom is discussed below:
<h3>Did Frederick Douglass want freedom?</h3>
After Douglass escaped, he wanted to promote freedom for all slaves. He published a newspaper in Rochester, New York, called The North Star. It got its name because slaves escaping at night followed the North Star in the sky to freedom.
Douglass believed that the right to liberty was a natural right, which had been clearly articulated in the Declaration of Independence. Disagreeing with Garrison, Douglass further believed that those who wrote the U.S. Constitution had intended to put slavery on a course of ultimate extinction.
Learn more about Douglass here:
brainly.com/question/9528697
#SPJ1
Callie Torres is your answer
<h3>hes right it's <em>D. Threatening</em> just got it right on APEX.... </h3>