1. Bandwagon: <em>persuades the target audience to take acrion</em>. "Don't get left behind!....and you don't want to be the only kid without it".
2. Scare tactic: <em>disseminates negative information to persuade the public</em>. "his home was burglarized".
3. Exaggeration:<em> makes something appear more powerfu</em>l. "Our manual will train you to read up to 20 times faster".
4: Generalization: <em>provides simple answers</em>. "you will be on your way to losing those extra pounds".
5. Appeal to Senses: <em>uses the emotional appeal to influence.</em> "Imagine spending your next vacation at..."
Resolution
The resolution of the story is the end. All of the conflicts are solved and subplots are wrapped up. Tension usually builds as the conflict begins and becomes more complicated. The author does this through the sequence of events, language, conflict, sentence structure, tone, and mood. The resolution is not an area of tension in a story. If there is, usually it's so that there can be a sequel.
Answer:
It's is a contraction and should be used where a sentence would normally read "it is." The apostrophe indicates that part of a word has been removed. Its with no apostrophe, on the other hand, is the possessive word, like "his" and "her," for nouns without gender.
,...................................