Answer:
1) Know the beliefs and attitudes of your audience to better communicate
Explanation:
In rhetorics, the speaker's or writer's goal is to affect their audience and get them to agree with their point of view. That's why it's extremely important for them to know their audience, including their beliefs and attitudes. In this case, the speaker/writer will try to make an ethical appeal (ethos) on the audience, trying to appeal to their social, religious, philosophical, ideological, and other values. There are two more types of appeal: logos (appeal to logic) and pathos (appeal to emotions).
Answer:
Yes, the term, 'their immediate concern was to save Lucas from the jaws of death' would be figurative speech because Lucas is <em>not</em> actually going to die by getting eaten. It is a metaphor.
Please paraphrase just in case.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Dear Friend,
It's been a minute. I have plans to go see Spiderman: No Way Home. Wanna come with? It'll be fun to see Tom kick butt together.
Love, Friend
Explanation:
Answer:
They saw that the animals can provide for themselves and the humans get things from trading.
Explanation:
1. figurative language is what a simile, metaphor, and everything else is
2. no clue
3. comparing two things without the use of the world “like”
4. comparing things by using the word “like”
5. giving human traits to an object
6. exaggeration
7. the opposite of an exaggeration
8. I forgot
9. comparing two or more things for clarification
10. something unexpected like “the fire station burned down”