I think it would be the first answer
1 to convince or persuade
2 to entertain
3 to invite to action
5 to explain
7 to expose something
Answer:
Proctor tells Mary not to go back to court because he is appalled at the type of evidence that was used to convict Osburn. He is also shocked that the court would not realize that Osburn was just old and a bit crazy.
Explanation:
*sigh*
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Well, since I had a look on the first words in the first sentence it become clear for me that the author included these sentence in order to provide a contrast to his group’s nonviolent efforts. Just because of the grammar structure of the lines, when it starts from ''The other'' we can predict that the speaker compares something with the excerpt represented above. I bet there was a previous introductory sentence that is connected with particular movement and further we can see ''the other" that reflects contrast.<span>
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<span>c. parallelism
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Sentence structures could be simple (one independent clause), compound (two independent clause with coordinating conjunction), complex (a subordinate & independent clause) and compound-complex sentences (subordinate & two independent clause). These include clauses, conjunctions, coherence and balance and even to the number of words you use in your subject and predicate. You must also see to it that when you do parallelism, your sentences still makes sense.</span>