The answer is B. it's just a way to strengthen your argument by debunking the other side respectively.
In this passage from Henry David Thoreau's Walden, the narrator uses strong sensory language to create clear images - to, in essence, paint a clear picture in words - of the forest and the hills. The narrator is able, through the use of such strong sensory language and imagery to give the read a clear image of what he is describing, which, in turns, makes the scene he is describing come to life.
bet i gotchu gimme my points too
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Answer:
because knowledge enables sense
Explanation:
this can easily be explained by an example the we can not talk about colours with a person who has never seen any.As the conversation would most likely just lead to a lecture instead of a conversation with mutual input and output