Answer: Wild Goose Chase
Explanation:
Plagiarism is a big issue in the academic and journalistic world ( indeed any subject that has to do with writing) and it is worthy of note that it does not mean simply copying a person's work to pass as your own. It can also mean failing to give proper credit where it is due.
This is the form of plagiarism that the Wild Goose Chase plagiarism is. It involves using the works of an author but instead of correctly citing them so due credit is given, the writer instead uses other sources either real or made up which is what Lee did in her blog post.
It is called a Wild Goose Chase because somebody aiming to verifying the information will not find the information where they were supposed to meaning that the writer had sent them on a wild goose chase.
<span> It is better to settle these matters in the courts than on the streets, and new laws are needed at every level, but law alone cannot make men see right. this sentence </span>
If your choices are the following:
<span>a. order of importance
b. chronological order
c. spatial order
d. process order
Then the answer would be A. order of importance. This is when the author organized his ideas through the use of important events in the story.</span><span />
Answer:
A. Ballad
Explanation:
Ballad is a poem or song narrating a story in short stanzas. Traditional ballads are typical of unknown authorship, having been passed on orally from one generation to the next as part of the folk culture.
Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence was published in year of 1776 is said to be a form of text that uses "pathos" as it appeals to emotions when it calls for a sense of empathy from the crown by making a list of percieved acts of tyranny from the king George III.
Specifically in the last 5 abuses, from 23 to 27 it makes a reference to the acts of the King: To suppress the colonial rebellion through violence and military means to attack the colonists. They burned towns and attacked ships.
By this writting is is evident that the author was trying to persuade and gain the audience, emotionally speaking.