Characterization<span> can be direct, as when </span>an author<span> tells readers what a character is like (e.g. "George was cunning and greedy.") or indirect, as when </span>an author<span> shows what a character is like by portraying his or her actions, speech, or thoughts </span>
An insane, unfeeling and cold-blooded murderer
Answer:
i believe the answer is d.
Explanation:
typically rhetorical situations are used in persuasive texts, so b and c go together, and a is the actual definition of a rhetorical situation, so i believe they all fit
Answer:
B. Interrogative
Explanation:
Reflective pronouns- that, which, who, whose, whom, where, when
Interrogative pronouns-who, what, why, where, when, whatever.
Who can be either be relative or interrogative. However, Interrogative "who" is used when asking questions while reflective is not.
Ex:
Reflective- It was I who ate all your chicken nuggets.
Interrogative- Who took all my toilet paper?