The speech President Kennedy's Report to the American People uses logos, ethos, and pathos, which are:
forms of persuasion first presented by Aristotle.
Ethos is an appeal to ethics. Its efficacy depends directly on the credibility of the speaker. The listener will tend to trust this sort of argument when it's given by a specialist on the subject or, at least, some sort of role model.
Pathos, on the other hand, is an emotional argument. It targets shared feelings and cultural values with the goal of having the listener relate to what is being said.
Logos is a logical argument. Its credibility relies on structure and evidence, as well as coherence. The speaker must be able to walk the listener through the logical path to the conclusion they must reach.
Same Sex Marriage. One state has it, federal law prohibits it. Many states also prohibit it and prohibit recognizing such a marriage from another state. (In essence violating the full faith and credit clause of the constitution, but there are lots of examples that in law) The US supreme court has not weighed in. So the issue is open. This issue could go lots of ways, depending on what cases get to the supreme court.
1. AGORAPHOBIA
2. AGORAPHOBIA
3. NYCTOPHOBIA
4. MONO-PHOBIA
5. TRYPANOPHOBIA
I’m not sure if thats the answer you’re looking for but all of those answer are from g0ogle :))
Adverb
clauses are group of words used in shifting or adding meaning of a verb,
clause, adjective, or another adverb. These clauses can be used if: firstly, a
sentence contains a subject and a predicate. Secondly, when a subordinate
conjunction is used and thirdly, if it answer the ‘adverbial questions’ – when,
why, when and how. It is also further categorized to time, place, manner,
degree, condition, concession and reason.
<span>In
the sentence: Below a shelf, she found plants with blooms of lavender
petals and yellow centers. </span>
<span>The
adverb phrase would be letter A: below a shelf</span>
Answer:
b) the "will work for air conditioning" sign,
c) the rat sweating on the sidewalk,
e) the comfortable man in the air-conditioned car
Explanation:
See attached image