Ethos, pathos, and logos. Ethos is appealing to the reader by the author establishing his credability. Pathos is appealing to the reader by the author "pulling at the readers heart strings." This means he is illiciting emotions in the reader. Logos is appealing to the reader by the author establishing logic in his argument. These stratagies are used by all authors, not just historical fiction writers.
Answer:
redundant, stranded, unseat, unrest, dander, tanners, darned, darted
The figurative language would be “..that nipped him sharply and bit with especial venom”
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Answer:
They most likely wouldn't.
Explanation:
People are different. Situations you consider bad or awkward, might be seen differently by someone else. Everyone of the most gracious and giving people on this Earth has made a mistake. A model of good character isn't someone who has never made a mistake, it's someone who does charity work, is kind, and giving throughout mistakes. If I meet someone who is considered a model of good character I wouldn't expect them to be proud of me, because I too, have made my plentiful of mistakes. But I would expect them to understand that nobody is perfect and they have made mistakes too.