Answer: hi
It is effective in that the rhetorical devices emphasise the message the author is trying to send:
- hypophora
the exclamation and tone that the message sends forth
Parallelism -
repeated use of a grammatical structure in a sentence
"Give me liberty or give me death!" or "We have petitioned; we have remonstrated; we have supplicated; we have prostrated ourselves before the throne." or "Our petitions have been slighted; our remonstrances have produced additional violence and insult; our supplications have been disregarded"
repetition -
repeating words or phrases for emphasis
"The war is inevitable--and let it come! I repeat it, sir, let it come."
"We must fight! I repeat it, sir, we must fight!"
Hoped I helped!
Explanation:
Answer: She takes her responsibility to look out for Raymond seriously.
Explanation:
Squeaky does not think that girls smile at each other genuinely.
It is a fascinating idea. Squeaky seems to be saying that she and the other girls her age don't grin at each other genuinely.
Squeaky does not feel a relationship with anybody her age, especially girls. Especially, she is frustrated because she has no close female friends. While she acts brave, it is evident to the reader it causes distress for her.
For Squeaky, a smile is related to trust and respect. She trusts and respects Raymond because she trusts and respects him. As soon as the race was over, she was stunned by the results, understanding Gretchen, finally realizes to respect and trust Gretchen, making them smile at each other. Now, she thinks of Gretchen as a friend.
Pathos is an appeal to emotion,so, i believe it would be <span>When it calls King George lll a "tyrant" </span><span />
I think it’s Behavioral science
Answer:
much
Explanation:
Answer choices:
Many- the phrase "very many makes sense.
A little- the phrase- "very a little" doesn't make sense.
A few- the phrase "very a few" doesn't make sense.
Some- the phrase "very some" doesn't make sense.
Less- the phrase "very less" doesn't make sense.
Fewer- the phrase "very fewer" doesn't make sense.
Several - the phrase "very several" doesn't make sense.
Much- the phrase "very much" makes sense.
However, taken in context, much is correct in this sentence.
We don’t get very many mail on Saturdays; most of it comes during the week.
Versus:
We don’t get very much mail on Saturdays; most of it comes during the week.