Answer: Doubt
Explanation: Most reasonable answer.
Macabre means having death as a subject : comprising or including a personalized representation of death.
Disturbing and horrifying because of involvement with or depiction of death and injury.
Coming back from the dead and decomposition involves death as a subject, and sorrow can be, but not always be caused by a loss of someone or a loved one.
Answer:
The excerpt from “The Girl Who Silenced the World for Five Minutes” which is a fact is: “All this [destruction] is happening before our eyes. . .” In 1979, Severn Cullis-Suzuki who was nine years of age founded the Environmental Children's Organization along with her friends.
Explanation:
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The correct answer to which logical fallacy appears in the passage "If I let you turn in your assignment late, then you won't understand the importance of deadlines. Then you won't be able to get into college and get a good job" is when the speaker states the second sentence, following the previous one with the connector "then", which expresses continuity in time, <em>consequence, "after that"</em>. So, the reader can infer that the second sentence is a natural consequence of the first one, something that would happen subsequently naturally, which configures a logical fallacy.
A logical fallacy is <em>the wrong use of reasoning, a flaw in the structure of a deductive argument which invalids the argument.</em> A fallacy usually <em>seems better than it really is </em>and some of them are committed intentionally to manipulate. Fallacies <em>intend to mislead in order to make false inferences seem real.</em>
<em>Nothing can lead the speaker to deduct that if a person doesn't understand the importance of a deadline, it would be a following natural consequence that this same person would be unable to get into college or get a good job.</em> What would determine if a person is able to get into college are <em>several other skill parameters and circumstances</em>. Not understanding the importance of a deadline <em>doesn't lead one to fail the attempt of getting into college</em>, nor it determines if a person will or will not get a good job.