This question is incomplete. The complete answer is:
Read the excerpt from Theodore Dreiser’s “My Brother Paul.” What narrative point of view does Dreiser use in this excerpt from the story?
"I had not seen my brother in three or four days, but after I had strolled a block or two up Broadway I encountered him. I have always thought that he had kept an eye on me and had really followed me; was looking, in short, to see what I would do As usual he was most smartly and comfortably dressed."
A. Second person
B. Third-person limited
C. First person
D. Third-person omniscient
The correct answer is C. First person.
Explanation
Explanation
In the narrative field, the first person refers to how one of the characters tells the story from his point of view. In this mode, the subjects I (singular) and we (plural) are used. According to the above, the previous fragment is written in the first person because whoever tells the story speaks of himself by saying "I had not seen my brother in three or four days ". According to the above, the correct answer is C. First person.
There are easily 5 beats per measure. And the quarter note gets one beat just like in 4-4 time.
So C is the answer.
Answer:
C) false causation
Explanation:
The false causation fallacy is a category of informal fallacies in which a cause is incorrectly identified. For example, "my going to sleep causes the sun to set." The two events may coincide, but have no causal connection.
Answer:
The evidence is relevant to the topic.
There is a sufficient amount of evidence.
Explanation:
You want your evidence to strengthen your argument. Therefore, it must be relevant and have enough of it to support your claim
The source of the evidence does not matter, as long as it is cited properly.
The author believing the evidence is valid does not necessarily mean that it truly is.