It is true that stigmas can become master statuses.
Stigma is a term which refers to something that can defame a person, those are quite negative labels which can change a person identity completely. Sometimes, they can become master statuses, which is the primary identification of a person.
It's not a simile since those use words like as and like, it's not personificatio because it's not giving non-liing things human qualities, I'm not sure what a hyperbole is but I'm almost 100% sure it's a metaphor...
The correct answer is B. Wiesel uses rhetorical questions to encourage the audience to continue to think about his ideas
Explanation:
The excerpt presented belongs to a speech known as "the Perils of Indifference" by Elie Wiesel who was a survivor of the Holocaust and an important author in the topic. In the excerpt presented, Wiesel refers to the indifference and the importance of learning from the past.
To explain this, the main technique Wiesel uses is rhetorical questions that are questions not intended to be answered by the audience but that encourages the audience to reflect and think about the ideas. For example, the rhetorical question "Have we really learned from our experiences? " makes the audience think about whether atrocities such as the Holocaust can occur again or the question "Has the human being become less indifferent and more human?" that questions the indifference in human societies.
The Apollo astronauts who went to the Moon are credited attaining with the fastest speeds at which humans have ever flown: about seven miles per second at the end of the rocket burn that lifted their craft beyond Earth's orbit. This is a paltry 1⁄250 of one percent of the speed of light.
Answer:
Explanation: Infringement is the action of breaking the terms of a law/agreement