The appropriate response is the first. You don't make a fiction story appear to be bona fide by including commentaries or references yet you do this when the subject is genuine like history. None of this is about fiction - where you make it up as you compose. At that point, you require activity or occasions to make the book appear to be practical. At the end of the day, a book set in 1944 in England better specify the Second World War or a book set in Germany in 1977 ought to say East and West Germany as independent countries.
Hello! Your answer is "The facts and logic used in the argument".
Logos is one of the persuasion techniques. Ethos and pathos are the other two. These three are different ways of persuading someone. The definition of ethos and pathos can be seen in the other two choices - pathos is the emotions used to manipulate the audience, and ethos is the bias of the author.
Logos is logic and facts - it gives evidence, facts, and proof, whether they're from statistics, studies, etc.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
The details from the historical fiction piece "Marie Curie and the Discovery of Radioactivity" that support Marie's factual statement are:
In the winter, it was so cold that she emptied her closet, piling the clothes on the bed so she'd be warm enough to sleep.
Explanation:
The question is not complete since it does not provide the options to answer, here are the options:
A) She also met the man who soon became her husband—Pierre Curie, a brilliant young physicist as promising (and poor) as Marie.
B) A moment later, people passing by the School of Physics and Chemistry were treated to a sight not often seen on the fashionable streets of Paris in the early 1900s: a bareheaded young woman in a laboratory smock, ripping eagerly into the pile of heavy sacks and burying her hands in . . . dirt?
C) In the winter, it was so cold that she emptied her closet, piling the clothes on the bed so she'd be warm enough to sleep.
D) No one, the Curies included, had ever seen this element. Still, the husband-and-wife team had given it a name: radium.
The original paragraph is describing a winter scene where the narrator explains how did Marie Curie managed to keep warm during the hard times then the line in option C is giving a detailed description of the same situation in a simplified version with simpler sentences that confirm the same idea.
I cannot answer this question as I have never read "The Crucible" before.