Answer:
D. It does not use excess words.
Explanation:
<u>Imagism </u>is the literary movement that focuses on the <u>depiction of things as they are and not romanticizing or using 'extra' language to decorate it </u>like the Romantics. This early 20th century poetic movement founded by Ezra Pound is in favor of precise writing and use of words, the depiction of what it really is, and direct use of language rather than go round it. It also favors the use of exact words and not use extra words.
Marianne Moore's poem<em> "The Jelly-Fish"</em> is a 20-lined poem that presents an image of a jelly-fish and how it reacts when a person tries to touch it or capture it. And in her use of such precise words and exact 'to-the-point' directness in the description of the fish, <u>Moore embodies Ezra Pound's rules of imagism in that it does not use excessive words to give a description of the fish.</u>
Both use flashback to provide crucial background to the characters' situation
Answer:
bandwagon appeals
Explanation:
The paragraph written by Nari contains a fallacy known as bandwagon appeal. The bandwagon appeal fallacy is committed when one tends to buttress their argument by basing it on the what appeals to what everyone seems to believe or like, and therefore the popularity seem to stamp an authority to give an argument validity.
This is evident in Nari's statement when she cited that more people choose tropical locations, and also celebrities also show themselves spending vacations in sunny locations. Nari seem to be committing the fallacy known as the bandwagon appeal, which can also mean appealing to popularity.
Nari should revise her writing to remove bandwagon appeals.