I'm like 90% sure it is d sorry if I get it wrong for you!
The logical fallacy which occurs in this case is a fallacy called Causal Fallacy, which in short words is when you explain something with the not necessarily true cause. this is calledin latin <em>non causa pro causa</em> which means,this is not cause for this cause. For example, people see a sports car crashed on the street. Immediately they blame the sports car driver for driving too fast. This is a false cause, because despite a sports car can be fast, that was not necessarily the cause of the accident.
Answer:
Proper adjective.
Explanation:
Assuming I read the sentence correctly, the word "German" is describing the type of chocolate (German chocolate AKA chocolate that's well...German).
Also, German is always capitalized regardless of how it's used in a sentence with some exceptions.
It's hard to explain (I'm bad at explaining things. Sorry).
It would be imagery because the excerpt is very descriptive.
Answer: He wants true glory for his honorable victory, considering he is using no weapons.
Explanation: