Answer:
by contrasting the way people feel with what is happening to the birds
Answer:
The words and phrases make the anecdote especially vivid are explained below in details.
Explanation:
The terms that make the joke definite are adjectives like "flashes", "small", "White" "bright", "red", "redness." The slogans that make the anecdote definite are the descriptive idioms that display what is appearing in the narrative being told, among these slogans we can quote: "The flashlight flashes on the magician's assistant", "The excellent Tonsoni declares he will change her attire from white to red", "The woman is awash in a flood of redness."
The impact that the words <em>feared</em> and <em>hatred </em>in the chapter 17 of The Prince have on the meaning of the passage is that they suggest that a ruler who is feared can retain power, while a ruler who is hated is less likely to do so.
In this chapter, Machiavelli establishes an important distinction between 'feared' and 'hatred'. The author argues that a prince should make himself feared by the masses but not hated. Moreover,<u> he states that one way of avoid being hatred is leaving his citizens' property intact</u>. According to Machiavelli, it is important to avoid being hatred because, unlike being feared, <u>a hated prince is more likely to lose his power due to the angry masses</u>.