Answer:
It uses a strong language to arouse emotions. instead of appealing to logic.
Answer: the answer is C !!
Explanation:
I have took this before and it was the right answer trust me if you have any questions feel free to asked me anytime I’m always on here!! Have a wonderful day !
Answer:
umm I really don't know but I can try okay:)
A well constructed play, Oliver Goldsmith’s She Stoops to Conquer (a comedic satire) entwined specific themes of action. Through the character’s, Goldsmith shows his audience the underlying meanings of the play. The themes of appearance versus reality, social class, and parent vs. child are all identified.
Sure hope this helps you
and good look an whatever test is coming up soon for you.
Answer:
"Verses Written by a Young Lady, on Women Born to be Controll'd!"
1. Delia's experience as Sykes's wife could be compared to the experience of the wife, detailed in the poem titled "Verses Written by a Young Lady, on Women Born to be Controlled!"
2. Delia chose to work in order to earn a living for the family when her indolent husband Sykes - as the head of the family refused to work. Delia was not too emotionally involved in the relationship with Sykes after many years of abuse. Thus, she preferred her husband's death to rescuing him after the rattlesnake poison started working its way on the instigator. Another way that Delia showed her freedom was through defiance. When Sykes threatened to stop her from working she did not yield to self-pity, she resolutely continued to work. Unfortunately, she also chose to continue with the abusive marriage at a time she could have chosen separation.
3. The ending of "Sweat" can be regarded as a "poetic justice." The evil conceived against another person has consumed the conceiver. In all, it was Sykes who encouraged Delia to neglect him in his moment of self-inflicted agony and death.
Explanation:
"Verses Written by a Young Lady, on Women Born to be Controll'd!" was a poem written by an anonymous author in 1743, lamenting the difficulties that women encounter in the hands of men. "Sweat" was a 1926 short story written by Zora Neale Hurston. It chronicled the domestic abuses faced by Delia in the hand of her unfaithful husband, Sykes.