Answer:
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "A. plot and C. stage directions." The major concerns of writing a play consists of the plot and stage directions. They have to be taken seriously because this is what the audience directly see and observe.
The answers to the question above would be the following ones:
A) The rhetorical device used here is repetition. President John F. Kennedy has chosen to repeat the same structures over and over again. We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade (...) not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve (...)".
B) The rhetorical device used here is satire. Satire is the use of humour, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity, particularly in the context of politics.
C) The rhetorical device used here is rhetorical question. Rhetorical questions are asked in order to make a statement. They do not expect any answer. Douglass believes that the wrongfulness of slavery is an issue that he expects everyone to be concerned with.
Answer: a command(an imperative sentence)
Explanation: You think there is no subject? No, there is an implied "you", so the sentence is a command.
Answer:
The reverend learns that Turner went to the island with Lizzie Griffin, an African American girl.
Explanation:
Turner falls in love with Lizzie, a black girl. Turner grew up in a racist community and always heard that blacks were dirty, inferior and unworthy, but Lizzie seemed totally different from that, which deeply caught his attention. Lizzie invited Turner to Malaga Island, to meet her family. He goes and is delighted not only with the environment, but with the people as well, who treat him very well making him spend a very comfortable day.
However when Turner returns home he has an unpleasant surprise, he discovers that the inhabitants of the city of Phippsburg are determined to expel all blacks from the island to build a resort that will bring profits to the city. Turner does not approve and is forced to admit that he spent the day with a black girl, when he admits, he receives another disappointment, as Reverend Buckminister is forced to side with the people of Phippsburg.