Answer:
Saki's short story, ''The Mouse,'' explores the overly worried mind of the main character, Theodoric, as he frets his way through an odd predicament. In order to dislodge a mouse from his clothing, Theodoric must strip down in the middle of a train car, in front of a young woman.
Explanation:
The slippery slope fallacy is something that many people fall into while writing something persuasive. This fallacy mostly happens when it is a primarily emotional argument with no factual support. The way it works is you make a claim that isn't entirely true, and then you base the rest of your argument on this point, even more "facts" off of this one slightly true fact you have stated. An example of this would be: "We can't allow people to go treasure hunting. By going treasure hunting people are more likely to trespass on other people's land in order to find treasure. By making trespassing less serious, people will start to loss their sense of other people's privacy. As you can see, if we allow people to pursuer treasure hunting, they will eventually start to break into other people's homes."
Answer:
I am ten million bricks of unshakable faith.
Explanation:
I believe that the answer is A.
Answer:
I would say that there isn't enough Information or a link to the question that you are asking.
Explanation: