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Alik [6]
3 years ago
6

List TWO Emotions/Feelings you have while watching "THE DANGER OF A SINGLE STORY BY:Chimamanda Adichie and explain why

English
1 answer:
Ahat [919]3 years ago
3 0
Understanding and sadness. Understanding because what is stated in the TED TALK is very true, and sadness because not many people will agree that it’s true.
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Why is it important to speak up
iren2701 [21]
It is important to speak up because it is a form of honesty. 
Also because some people can take advantage of you being quiet.
Most people like pressurizing you when are very quiet.
In class when you are quiet but know the right answer the teacher might think that you don't like speaking
People would love to bully you more if you are quiet and are shy. They will trouble you a lot.

4 0
3 years ago
Operated by wires above the stage, the marionettes whose features seemed lifelike. A.Fragment B.Run on C.Correct
Dovator [93]

Answer:

A. Fragment

Explanation:

A sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence. Some fragments are incomplete because they lack either a subject or a verb, or both.

This particular sentence lacks a verb. "the marionettes" is the subject of the independent clause. "Operated by wires above the stage" is a participial phrase modifying the subject, i.e. providing some description about the subject;  "whose features seemed lifelike" is a dependent clause describing the subject.

As we see, there is <u>no verb to clarify the subject</u>. What does the writer want to say about "the marionettes"? What did they do? or What were they? We have a written fragment, a major writing error.

8 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What are Logical Fallacies<br><br><br> in your own words. don't lookup google definition
quester [9]

Answer:

A logical fallacy is a mistaken belief to the effect that inferences having a certain structure are valid. Put another way,  a logical fallacy is a belief in the legitimacy of what is in fact an illegitimate rule of inference.  As the examples below indicate, logical fallacies are sometimes a reflection of mere prejudice and in other cases they embody actual ratiocinative  shortcomings.

Explanation:

Here are some examples:

(1) People will often accept what people in authority, even if the data clearly indicates that they're wrong. If an economist from Harvard weighs in on an issue and homeless person weighs in on that same issue, the economist will be believed and the homeless person will be ridiculed, even if the data makes it very clear that the homeless person is right. (This is known as the 'fallacy of authority.' )

(2) People tend judge others by their words, not their deeds, with the result that a grouchy person who does good is seen as evil, whereas an evil person who pays lip-service to virtue is seen as good.

(3) People assume that what they are not familiar with is impossible. Smith says that his girlfriend has symptoms XYZ and Jones, not having ever personally seen anybody exhibiting those symptoms, refuses on that basis alone to believe Jones.

(4) People have some tendency to assume that entailments are 'convertible', i.e. that if q follows from p, then p also follows from q ('if Smith was decapitated, then he died; so given that he died, he must have been decapitated'). This known as 'affirming the consequent.'        

(5) It is assumed that confirmation is transitive, i.e. that if p confirms q and q confirms r, then p confirms. But this is not so. Smith's being a crime boss is evidence of his having considerable, and Smith's having considerable wealth is evidence of his having some kind of legitimate employment; but Smith's being a crime boss is not evidence of his having legitimate employment.

When people commit fallacies 1-3, their doing so tends to have an emotional basis; they want to believe that authority-figures are good people, that people are honest, and that what is strange is impossible. When people commit fallacies 4 and 5, their doing is less a reflection of emotionally rooted prejudices than of sheer lack of acumen. In any case, all of these fallacies are routinely committed.

3 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Question 6 of 10
steposvetlana [31]
B is the correct answer to this questions hope this helps!
6 0
2 years ago
Is "your hug is a warm blanket on a cold day" a metaphor or simile?
Nesterboy [21]

Answer:

metaphor

Explanation:

it doesn't use the words like or as

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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