Traditionally, indigenous comes from the Latin word indigena (indu/endo: in/within + gignere: to beget (to procreate or generate). But here we are simply looking at roots. The root words here are -gen (something produced, and by extension, birth) and -ous (possessing/full of), and that combination is not an option, it seems. HOWEVER, it is not uncommon for suffixes to have more than one meaning, and this is no exception. -ous also means 'having, full of, or characterized by', meaning your answer is the second option, 'the word root “gen” means “birth,” and the suffix “-ous” means “having the quality of something.”'
B. Education, healthcare, and social work I think
Answer:
pathos
Explanation:
The rhetorical technique used here is is pathos.
Pathos is a rhetorical technique which appeals to the emotions of the audience. It is actually used to invoke feelings of the audience.
We see that in the statement, the speaker said "I do not think, comrades, that I shall be with you for many months longer, before I die,..." Such statement will invoke the emotions of the audience. The speaker's statement about his death actually arouses a feeling of pity and sorrow in the audience.
Elizabeth Coatsworth uses short, quick words in the first stanza of "Swift Things Are Beautiful" because they d. contribute to the ongoing metaphor in Coatsworth's work. In my opinion it's the most correct option.