From the excerpt and the historical context, one can understand that the league of women is constituted by wome from all sorts of different backgrounds, some are "ladies", meaning married women, like Mary Dreier, while others are working class women, like Leonora O'Reilly. This means that <em>the support of weathy league women contributed to the succesful outcome of the female workers' strike. </em>The first option is the right answer.
Here is the full excerpt for this question:
For me, reading has always been a path toward liberation and fulfilment. To learn to read is to start down the road of liberation, a road which should be accessible to everyone. No one has the right to keep you from reading, and yet that is what is happening in many areas in this country today. There are those who think they know best what we should read. These censors are at work in all areas of our daily lives.
I believe the answer is: D. emotions
Rhetoric that appeal to emotions could be seen from the use of sentences that is aimed to make the readers/listeners relate to a certain situation that might ignite their emotional response. From the excerpt above, this could be seen in this line: <em>No one has the right to keep you from reading, and yet that is what is happening in many areas in this country today.</em>
Yes
Because we are raised with what are parents believe and we can either agree or disagree with effects how and who we become
Answer:
Explanation:
Mrytle's sister leans over to Nick, "Neither of them can stand the person they're married to." But, she explains, "She's a Catholic and they don't believe in divorce."
Nick narrates, "Daisy was not a Catholic and I was a little shocked at the elaborateness of the lie."