When Obama says " Last year, we relied less on foreign oil, than in any of the past sixteen years" he is using persuasion. He is persuading the listener by appealing to their sense of being independent from having to get oil from some of the foreign countries that we were at war with. When he states "A strategy that's cleaner" he is appeasing the people who are environmentalists and who want to do what they can for the planet. He also manages to intrigue the common working man by stating that the country will be "full of new jobs."
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
You only get one life, don't waste it.
1. pair- two; a set
2. petal- part of a flower responsible for its colour
3. pear- a fruit
4. for- a preposition or conjunction
5. pare- to peel the skin of a fruit or vegetable
6. right- that which is correct or just
7. rain- water that comes from the sky in drops
8. rein- a long leather strap attached to a horse's mouth and used to guide it
9. reign- a sovereign's rule; period of a sovereign's rule
10. four- a numerical unit indicating something is one more than three
11. rite- a ceremony
12. pedal- a lever operated by a foot that promotes locomotion
13. write- to construct letters or symbols using a pen or pencil
14. peddle- to go from place to place selling things
15. fore- before; the front part; warning used in golf
Answer: D
Explanation:
Deeply troubled [Hektor] spoke to his own great-hearted spirit: "Ah me! If I go now inside the wall and the gateway, Poulydamas will be first to put a reproach upon me, since he tried to make me lead the Trojans inside the city on that accursed night when brilliant Achilleus rose up, and I would not obey him, but that would have been far better. Now, since by my own recklessness I have ruined my people . . .”
The first bold shows that he regrets a certain decision, and the second bold shows the result of his decision.
<span>The main reason Shakespeare's plays are difficult for modern readers to understand is that they are mostly written in poetry and quite dense and difficult poetry at that. Shakespeare also often writes in long and complicated sentences which are tricky to unravel. Although a lot of people focus on unusual words in Shakespeare's vocabulary</span>