Give us a Image of the BOOK or give us some parts of the book because nobody’s gonna buy the book just to answer your question, try again.
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Anticipate with great apprehension of fear.
A logical fallacy is a flaw in logical reasoning. There are numerous flaws in judgment. One example is the "ad hominem" fallacy, where instead of arguing a point, the person attacks the person's character. Ex. "We should ban cigarettes." "Why should I agree with you? You smell really bad!"
Another example is the "burden of proof" fallacy, where a person who makes a claim states that it is up to the other party to disprove them, rather than prove their own statement. This is fallacious because the inability to disprove something doesn't automatically mean that it is proven. Ex. "There is a teapot floating in between Mars and Earth at this very moment. Prove me wrong!" "I can't do that, because I can't go to space right now." "Therefore, I am right!"
The correct answer for this question is this one:
The dangling modifier in the excerpt are:
<span>There are many things that people do to stay healthy. <u>Before going for a run or working out, they can hydrate well</u>. Covering a salad with calorie-rich dressing, the nutritional value plummets. <u>Living a healthy lifestyle, people generally find great joy.</u>
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Hope this helps answer your question and have a nice day ahead.
A thesis statement is an arguable statement that you then set out, through your discussion and examples, to support. In order for the thesis statement to be strong or solid it should takes some sort of stand, justifies discussion, expresses one main idea, and lastly <span>thesis statement is specific.</span>