Coarse means rude or rough.
Thus the word that is best associated with the word coarse is B. Roughness.
Roughness is somehow similar to coarse, it shows cruelty or rudeness in some actions or words. Other term that can be used to describe it is being impolite.
It stands for Old English.
Fallacy is the use of faulty arguments which are not valid and as such are <em>rendered untrue </em>because of the way they are presented in the argument. <em>Some fallacies look valid,</em> but are still fallacious because <em>they do not satisfy</em> an important logical premise.
As a result of this, we can see that there are various types of fallacy and they include:
- Fallacy of Hasty Generalisation
- Argumentum ad Baculum
- Argumentum ad Hominem
- Slippery Slope
For example, when we use Argumentum ad Baculum (appeal to force), we try to make use of force to silence a person who has made a very valid and logical argument.
For example, when you tell a person, "I will soon slap you if you do not close up your mouth" is an appeal to force or Argumentum ad Baculum
Please note that your question is incomplete so I gave you a general overview so that you would get a better understanding of the concept.
Read more about fallacy here:
brainly.com/question/20939336
You would use "he" here because at a later part we encounter "he can graduate" which shows that the doer of the action is a male and therefore requires "he" to be used.
An example of this would be the Odyssey, in which Homer asks the muses for assistance. This 'epic convention' is known as an invocation. In many religious settings, an invocation is a prayer to open the meeting. This always helps me to remember, because in both examples it is a plea to a God(s) and at the beginning.