<span>No, it lulls him into a false sense of security." No man of woman born shall harm Macbeth" Little did Macbeth know that MacDuff was "untimely ripped" meaning born of C-section...</span>
Answer:
C. Apostrophe
Explanation:
Apostrophe:
Apostrophe is a figure of speech by using which a writer or speaker addresses an absent/dead person as if he/she were present, or an inanimate object or idea as if it were a living thing and listening to him/her (speaker).
Examples:
"O wild West Wind"
"O, my cell phone, you were so dear to me."
Hyperbole: It is an exaggerated statement not to be taken literally.
Examples:
"The sun came just meters away from the earth."
"She would conquer the entire universe with her smile"
Simile:
It is a figure of speech in which the writer makes comparison between two things which may have some relation but are different. Simile always uses comparison words such as, like, as, similar to etc.
Examples:
"He is as brave as a lion"
"Life is like a dream"
Litotes:
It is an understatement in which a positive statement is made by negating its opposite. Or use of double negatives to make a positive statement.
Examples:
"It was not one of my best days" to mean It was one of my bad days."
"The books was not bad" to mean the book was good."
Answer:
Use emotional appeals to supplement your evidence and reasoning
Explanation:
From Chapter 17 of the textbook, <em>Persuade Reasoning Credibility, Evidence</em>, it is advised that emotional appeals in persuasive speeches should be used ethically to supplement evidence and reasoning.
Emotional appeal is a logical fallacy in which a person tries to win an argument by getting his opponent to reply emotionally.
Answer: read throught the passage
Explanation:
you have to read then write