I would say driver, as the other ones work from offices and desks
The anecdotal evidence that supports the writer's claim is:
"teenagers are the ideal employees for the fast-food industry."
<h3>What is a claim?</h3>
A Claim is a position that the author considers to hold a superior argument and maybe buttressed by facts.
In this case, in the text "A Look at the Fast-Food Industry", the author is of the opinion that "teenagers are the ideal employees for the fast-food industry.
Learn more about anecdotal evidence at:
brainly.com/question/1477323
#SPJ4
1. The speaker is in his chamber late at night reading old books.
2. The speaker starts feeling drowsy when he hears a tapping at the window.
3. The speaker comforts himself into believing that the tapping sound is a visitor who has come to see him.
4. The speaker is surprised to find no one when he opens his door.
5. The speaker gets even more frightened when the curtains rustle.
6. The speaker hears a noise at the window and a raven flies in.
7. The speaker whispers the name "Lenore", and he hears the same name echoed back.
I think it is the story of The Labyrinth
Assuming you are referring to Spenser's Sonnet 75, and Shakespeare's Sonnet 18, the correct answer is writing about people serves to immortalize them.
Both sonnets talk about love - the narrators are writing about their loved ones in order for them to stay alive through poetry and art, even when they die in real life. As long as their poetry exists, the people they wrote about will exist as well - they will be immortal, just like poetry.