Answer: C. Eugene can claim to know everything but still not know everything, a behavior which may fit better as a teenager, thus making him it more believably human.
Explanation:
You didn't give the passage where you got the options from and I couldn't get it online as well but based on some information gathered online, the answer is option C.
The option that summarizes the advantage(s) of the program's teen persona is that Eugene can claim to know everything but still not know everything, a behavior which may fit better as a teenager, thus making him it more believably human.
Therefore, the correct option is C.
Answer:
The correct use of images, symbols and word play will be vital to create, and promote, a readers suspension and disbelief. These images, the environment of suspense created by them, and the words used by a writer, will enhance this suspension and this disbelief. In literature this is vital as it is one way in which a writer will be able to maintain a reader´s interest in the story. Without this, the emotional and sensible part of the reader will not be engaged and soon interest will fall. But through the use of suspensful words, and images, as well as the use of symbols that create a sense of wonder, and leave the reader wishing for more, the writer promotes that sense of suspension and disbelief.
Answer:
Ethos is a literary element used to establish some form of credibility, morals or ethics. It is used when trying to make someone believe in your character or a piece of information as proper. In this excerpt from Harriet Tubman's: Conductor on the Underground Railroad, "As they walked along she told them stories of her own first flight, she kept painting vivid word pictures of what it would be like to be free". The first sentence indicates the use of ethos by Tubman: "As they walked along she told them stories of her own first flight". And this is because she tries to tell them about the efforts she made to run away for them to trust her abilities.
B.The satirist is suggesting a ridiculous solution to make his point, while the narrator is suggesting a practical solution to the problem.
Answer:
Explanation:
This ensures that the clergymen have no doubts as to what MLK's intentions are and his methods of enacting them. In these paragraphs, MLK gives and introduction to his speech. He uses appeals to ethics and authority to get his point across to the clergymen. In this section, MLK uses another appeal to ethos in order answer the clergyman's claims. By stating his position in the S.C.L.C., MLK lets the clergymen know that he is not just someone off the street, he is maximizing his qualifications to be interfering with the problems in Birmingham.