Answer:
In today's society it's easy for us to use animals as an easy access to testing out our makeup, medicine or products, but we forget we too are animals. We are made up from the same animal cells that the animals we are testing on, where have we gone wrong? Are we forgetting that animals have feelings and are able to feel pain? We put so many animals through unimaginable suffering and lock them up in testing labs to be tortured just to see if the new lipstick will affect us. We have already lost the lives of many animals due to this cruel way of testing, we don't need new shampoos or perfumes, stop testing on innocent animals
false. Although they held each other in high regards, there's no specific evidence that he was inspired by him as Whitman came from a poor family and was never really that educated until later in his life.
I hope this helps
The Narrator from the Story "Sixteen" is using a rhetorical appeal called Ethos, where the presenter of the idea tries to convince the audience that he or she is qualified on the subject or matter of discussion
Just as reference I present the different Rhetorical Appeals. They are maneuvers in rhetoric that classify the speaker's appeal to the audience. The Rhetorical Appeals are:
Ethos: It is how well the presenter convinces the audience that the presenter is qualified to speak on the subject, and by doing that what the presenter says is valid.
Pathos: is an appeal to the audience’s emotions
Logos: it. It is normally used to describe facts and figures that support the speaker's claims or thesis.
Kairos: An orator uses this to their advantage to persuade the audience to act now at the time being
The effect that the narrator's insistence that she is experienced causes the reader to think that:
It makes the reader understand that the narrator has a great deal of life experience.