Answer:
True. a rhetorical question is a question that doesn't require an answer, and usually when someone asks "You're kidding me?", or "Are you kidding me?" it's usually said in exasperation, where there is no answer required.
The lawyer was deceptively honest with his clients.
An oxymoron is a phrase of opposites in which the two opposing words are side by side. In this sentence, deceptively means not to be true and honest means to be true. These words are found together in the sentence with deceptively describing honest.
Antithesis can sometimes be confused with oxymoron. An antithesis when two phrases contradict each other. An example of this is Option A where the first half of the sentence contradicts the second half.
Answer:
why she should:
1.because she does not want to marry Paris
2.she has had enough following her parents orders
3.she is married to Romeo
why she shouldn't:
1.she should tell her parents that she is married already
2.after taking the dug she could have side affects
3.there will be consequences
Explanation:
The answer is an appositive phrase. An appositive is an extra piece of detail or information describing in this case "lemon cake" and which the sentence still makes sense without. It still makes sense to say "<span>For my birthday, we baked a lemon cake." The "special treat" adds additional information about the "lemon cake."</span>