Three(3) persuasive appeals I have heard this week are :
- Go get your PVC and vote
- Learn a new skill while on holidays
- Buy two products get one free
<h3>Examples of persuasive appeals </h3>
<u>Go get your PVC and vote</u> was a persuasive appeal made by our local politician which was aimed at getting electorates to get prepared for the for coming elections and I think the appeal was necessary and I was able to go get registered to acquire my PVC since I did not have one.
<u>Learn a new skill while on holidays</u> was aimed at encouraging senior high school and college level students to engage in learning a new soft or technical skill to increase their employability status after graduation Which I believe was persuasive enough. I didn't not act because I was not on holidays yet.
When you <u>buy some products and get a free gift</u> it is an encouragement for he customer to continue patronizing the store/business therefore I find is persuasive enough and I will visit the store soon enough.
Hence we can conclude that your answers are as listed above
Learn more about persuasive appeals : brainly.com/question/10271704
#SPJ1
Explanation:
i think its A but I'm not sure
..........
<span>In the scenario in which Mackenzie was born deaf to hearing-impaired parents. and she is fluent in sign language and successful in school, </span><span>she will perform on a standard intelligence test compared to hearing children her age b</span>ecause the intelligence test is in the culture's dominant language (a language she cannot hear), she will not perform as well.
I disagree. The same way that "beauty is in the eye of the beholder," music does not have a set list of rules to go by. Yes there is "bad" music, but what is bad to one person is not bad to another. By judging music by the "pleasure it gives," you are both creating a standard that not all music can, or needs to achieve and you are assuming that all listeners have the same taste as you.
Hans Lippershey, also known as Johann Lippershey or Lipperhey, was a German-Dutch spectacle-maker. He is commonly associated with the invention of the telescope, although it is unclear if he was the first to build one.