Answer:
B
Explanation:
Figurative language is language that does not say exactly what it means. In all of the other answer choices, the answers could logically happen. In answer B, however, it states, "like a gathering storm." This is a comparison using like or as, which means it is a simile. Similes are very common types of figurative language.
Excerpt from the poem: "Thy Godlike crime was to be kind,
To render with thy precepts less
The sum of human wretchedness,
And strengthen Man with his own mind;
But baffled as thou wert from high,
Still in thy patient energy,
In the endurance, and repulse
Of thine impenetrable Spirit,
Which Earth and Heaven could not convulse.."
If you read the poem you can tell he is telling him that by mixing in with the lives of mortals, he is only brought despair, because he lives forever while the do not and his attachments only end in pain and death.
Answer: Being too involved in the lives of mortal men.
Answer:
Appeal to pity.
Explanation:
A fallacy is elucidated as the error or flaw in reasoning or logic of an argument that makes it invalid and unsound and affects its validity.
'Appeal to pity' is demonstrated as the fallacy or illogical reasoning in which the arguer attempts to gain support of the audience through exploitation of the opponent's emotions of pity.
In the given example, <u>'appeal to pity'</u> fallacy has been demonstrated as the <u>author illogically aims to establish the truth of his conclusion('return of anti-semitism') and win audience's support emotionally by manipulating the opposition's sense of emotion or pity</u>('find it incredibly ironic that he and other Moral Majority types conveniently overlook the fact that they, too, pack away a pretty tidy sum themselves through their fund-raising efforts which is deplorable'). Thus, <u>'appeal to pity'</u> is the correct answer.
The correct answer is B. A chorus of singing and dancing men. :)
Answer:
the answer is letter D
Explanation:
" this has nothing to do with the native Americans '