What would be the question exactly?
Veracity evaluation of news media reporting and other types of communication, such as political speeches, is the aim of fact-checking. Learn about fact-checking and how to look into statements or news reports.
<h3>Specifying False News</h3>
- You may have heard of a 1998 Lancet article that suggested immunizations may contribute to autism.
- Although this study has subsequently been discredited, it is an intriguing illustration of how scientific research can be presented as "facts" when it may not be.
- Fake news is untrue information that has been carefully modified to appear as reliable journalistic reporting.
- It is then easily distributed online to huge audiences that are eager to believe the lies.
To learn more False News refer:
https://brainly.ph/question/4821251
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Answer:
thanks for the points, non user i was talking to hours ago.
Explanation:
The sentence in the above excerpt from "In Another Country" by Ernest Hemingway which is an example of irony is:
“You are a fortunate young man.”
The story "In Another Country" is about Hemingway's personal experiences in the Milanese hospital. He narrates the stories of the patients admitted with him after the end of the first World War. The story talks about the wounds which the war has given to them, apart from the physical pains. The wounded soldiers wanted to erase the ills and effects which the world war has given to the world. In the above excerpt, it is ironical that the doctor calls the football player 'a fortunate man' after his leg broke off.
Answer:
<em><u>? . ! . . ; ! ? ! ?</u></em>
Explanation:
Have you ever wondered where your gas money goes <em><u>?</u></em> The biggest portion goes to the manufacturers of crude oil, the people who get the oil out of the ground <em><u>.</u></em> They take a whopping 72% <em><u>!</u></em> The people who refine the crude oil, turning it into gasoline, earn about 9% <em><u>.</u></em> The distributors, people who move the oil around, make 7% <em><u>.</u></em> You may wonder who the rest goes to <em><u>;</u></em>
Well, taxes account for the other 12% <em><u>!</u></em> Do you know how much the station owners make <em><u>?</u></em> They make as little as a few cents A GALLON <em><u>!</u></em> Shocking, isn’t it <em><u>?</u></em>
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