It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question, but anyway, here is the answer. Based on the given passage above, the details in the passage are suited to the audience which are <span>first-time computer users. Hope this helps.</span>
The correct answer here is the third option.
Satire is the style of writing employed by writers when they criticize the society in any form or humans in general. In the genre of satire all the follies, vices, shortcomings and abuses of the society or the individual are ridiculed, mocked but the main thing about the satire, even though it is funny and humorous, its main purpose is the betterment of the society and constructive social criticism.
The answer to your question would be that the sentence that uses two prepositional phrases is the following one: The helicopter landed among the cars in the parking lot. The two prepositional phrases in the sentence are "among the cars" and "in the parking lot".
A prepositional phrase is a group of words made up of a preposition and its object. The object may be a noun, a pronoun, a gerund or a clause. What is more, a prepositional phrase functions as an adjective or adverb.
Answer:
true
Explanation:
Fallacies refer to errors in reasoning is true
Perspective means the way h view something just put what ever u view it as