The text feature support David Livingsto purpose to portray Africa positively to Europeans-It shows the beauty of the landscape,
Explanation:
David Livingstone was the first European to cross the African continent .
He was a medical doctor by profession and was also a Scottish missionary who explored Africa.
He was greatly influenced by the beauty and the landscape of Africa.
David Livingstone also trek across the Kalahari Desert of Africa . It was in the year 1849, he explored Lake Ngami and, in the year 1851, the river Zambezi was discovered .
Then Livingstone explored the western coastal region of Luanda in the eyar 1853. It was in the year 1855, he discovered Zambezi falls, Know as the "Smoke That Thunders"(by the native people)
In the year 1857 Livingstone came back to England and published a book titled "Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa"
Thus we can say that -The text feature support David Livingsto purpose to portray Africa positively to Europeans-It shows the beauty of the landscape,
This is a quote from John Green's "A Fault in our Stars".
It's basically an exaggeration depicting the emotion of a reader who has just read a book that made a very strong impression on the person to levels that he wants everyone to read this book so as to feel the emotions that swell within John. This want is depicted by the phrase "weird evangelical zeal". The reader acknowledges that such a zeal is weird. Few things can make a person want to scream a message to the whole world which is the emotion the above exaggeration is describing. John simply desires for everyone to feel what he felt, but he knows it's most likely not possible to carry another person on the ride of intrigue he experienced, hence admitting that it is weird. There's an irony there because he knows it would be difficult for another to convey theirs to him too.
The exaggeration continues when the John declares that the world stands a chance of fixing itself only after it has read the book. Here John is simply implying that reading this book would be helpful to every reader in every circumstance.
Julius Caesar is a play deeply concerned with the idea of rhetoric, or persuasion. The play is driven by persuasion. Cassius convinces Brutus that Caesar must die, setting the story in motion. The resolution of the plot is decided by Antony's speech to the plebeians. Shakespeare sees rhetoric as one of the most powerful forces in the world; able to topple kings and crown them. The play, Julius Caesar, examines what gives rhetoric its power by pitting Brutus's speech against Mark Antony's. Shakespeare shows Antony's rhetoric to be superior by the effect he has on the plebeians.
Brutus's speech fails to convince permanently win over the crowd because he does not understand them. His first failure is at the beginning of his speech when he asks the plebeians to, "Censure me in you wisdom, and awake your senses". It seems as though he does not realize that he is speaking to an angry mob. His argument is based on cold and calculating reason. He argues that the love of freedom is stronger than the ties of friendship. "Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more". This logic cannot sink deeply into an emotional mob. He asks the plebeians to "Believe me for mine honor, and have respect to mine honor that you may believe". He cannot use his honor as a reason for belief in his story when his honor is in question. Brutus fails to offer any proof of Caesar's ambition, the central point of his argument. He ends his speech with a verbal attack on any who disagree with him, essentially calling them cowards. This silences dissension temporarily but when the other side is presented it does not help his cause. Brutus's argument fails because he much less a man of the people than he would like to think.
Mark Antony's argument is a great piece of rhetoric. He successfully accomplishes his object of convincing the plebeians that Brutus is a traitor. He has mastered the use of emotion, subtlety and logic. He uses emotional phrases such as, "My heart is in the coffin there with Caesar" and "Oh judgment, thou art fled to brutish beasts". Which give him a connection with the emotion the crowd is feeling at the death of Caesar. He begins not by attacking Brutus..
The answer is D. HOPE THIS HELPS