Hyperbole since it is an over exaggeration<span />
'Logos' in Literature, can be simply defined as an appeal to logic. It's a device (a tool) used by writers (and implicitly by common people in everyday speaking).
It is one of the three called 'Aristotelian appeals' (Logos, Ethos, and Pathos). The most important thing to know about them here is that they all serve a common purpose: Prove the author's argument. Logos aims to do this through logic.
So usual characteristics of this tool are the use of facts, statistics, etc. (Please note that the sole use of these elements does not characterize Logos. Logos appears when these elements are used, again, to sustain an argument.)
Therefore the best answer would be letter B. As by stating his firsthand experience, the author tries to legitimate any argument he proposes after that.
Answer:
competeing in olympics, sports car, graduating
Explanation:
select those?
Answer:
3, 1, 2 & 4
Explanation:
In 1642 the Long Parliament ordered a closure of the London theatres.
John Milton published Aeropagitica (an essay defending freedom of the press) in 1644.
King Charles I was beheaded in 1649 during the English Civil War.
Behn became a popular playwright with her most popular play The Rover, part I in 1677. There's a sort of controversy about who was the first English woman to make her living as a professional writer. Lady Elizabeth Cary and Margaret Cavendish may have started their careers as playwrights earlier that century.