Ethos, pathos, and logos. Ethos is appealing to the reader by the author establishing his credability. Pathos is appealing to the reader by the author "pulling at the readers heart strings." This means he is illiciting emotions in the reader. Logos is appealing to the reader by the author establishing logic in his argument. These stratagies are used by all authors, not just historical fiction writers.
<span>1.William Shakespeare - most scholars accept this candidate.
2. Edward de Vere - a famous writer who wrote Shakespeare's plays on the side of a philosophical and political career.
3. Francis Bacon - has biographical information that seems to match some events in Shakespeare's work.
4. Christopher Marlowe - a spy who faked his death but continued to write plays under the name of Shakespeare.</span>
Answer:
A
Explanation:
C usually doesn't help with anything aside from implying how fast the plot is progressing, or a sudden break/ change from the initial storyline, that kind of thing.
B. The surface level topic is always very apparent, it's the underlying topic that requires knowing what's the tone of the text and some other factors to know.
D. The quantity of adjectives used usually doesn't matter as much as the quality of the adjectives used.
So A is the answer I deducted.
Answer:
The solution was to cut paper to the size of the book and paste it on so that the children don't get offended.
Explanation:
Answer:
There are a couple ways this could be worded, here is 2
Father convicted of manslaughter has strenuous financial situation placed on family.
Convicted of manslaughter, father of 2 forced to pay off trust fund putting his family in financial strain.