Hello There!
I'm pretty sure it is C. Friendly-looking dog.
In all the other examples a comma should have been used as it is a 'list'
Hope This Helps You!
Good Luck :)
- Hannah ❤
B or C i think, but i’m not for sure so please let me know and correct me if i was wrong :)
The rhetorical appeal would be pathos because it is asking the audience to appeal to emotion
As it is banned around schools everywhere, it should be taught to show students the past. Teachers who are teaching it still with advisory from others have stated that it is the best read of their career. The students enjoyed it and the teacher enjoyed it as well. The book has children who are rebellious, illiterate, and more. Students enjoy this book, so why ban it? Officials banned this book due to its somehow racist language and think it's inappropriate for children. Children aren't the ones reading it, it's normally students over 10th grade. As if we've never heard any of these words before or faced these problems.
-Mabel <3
Answer:
Yes, Nathaniel Hawthorne was right in naming Brown's wife "Faith".
Faith is a representation of the faith and belief of not only Brown himself but also that of the believers/ Christians who are tempted everyday by the devil. In her attempts to persuade Brown to not go into the forest, telling him about the dream, she is the 'spiritual' image of God who is trying to stop his people from being cheated/ tempted or brought to sin.
Brown initially has full faith in his wife but at the end of the story, we see him a changed man. He no longer sees her as the woman she was in the start but he began to question her each and every actions.
Explanation:
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" tells the complex tale of the character Young Goodman Brown and his conflicting belief in his own faith and later on, that of his villagers including his own wife. He had left his village and his wife to be tempted by the devil, returning back a shaken man altogether.
Hawthorne had aptly named "Faith", the wife of Goodman Brown for she represents the faith and innocence of the true Puritan believer. She is the epitome of what a believer of God should be but she appears in a different light in her husband's face after his return from the forest. From her reluctance to let Brown go into the forest to be tempted by the devil, she represents a Christian's life to stay away from any devilish temptation. She is the 'spiritual' representation of God trying to prevent His people from being tempted.
At first, Brown seems to have full faith in her naivety and innocence. He even expresses regret in leaving her all alone to be tempted in the forest. But after the devil had tempted him and had taken him through the evil ceremony of inducting the 'new converts' to the devil, he began to question her character and could not seem to see her in the same position he had put her before the temptation. There is no proof that what happened in the forest was real, but what the devil intended to d has had its effect. Brown now no longer trusts her, nor the village priest and others. he began to question each an everyone's faith, ever doubting them.