Answer:
an indirect reference to a place, person or a event
Explanation:
<em> </em><em>allusion </em><em>is </em><em>an expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly; an indirect or passing reference.</em>
#◌⑅⃝●♡⋆♡Nåmřāthā ♡⋆♡●⑅◌
Explanation:
Receptionist- Hello! this is your local doctors office! Chelsea speaking how may I help you?
Me' - Hi, I need to make an appointment with Dr. Thomas.
Receptionist- Ok, What's the appointment for?
Me' - A follow up on my diagnosis with COPD
Receptionist- Ok, when can you come in?
Me- Nex Friday.
Receptionist- Okay. that will work. He may want to do an X-ray on your lungs. When you arrive bring your insurance and be 15 minutes early to fill out paper work. Any questions?
Me. No. thank you!
What exactly are you talking about?
Answer:
E
Explanation:
Answer E id your best option here. With A, there is no way to have a fallback, a sort of a null hypothesis to your question. Also most research questions aren't yes or no. B is incorrect because if you want an answer you will consider both sides of an issue to draw that conclusion, but the question will not explore both sides. It will want one answer. For C, just because a question is lengthy doesn't mean it's strong. It can be wordy and poorly constructed, making it a poor question. Since it is a research question, it should be very open for debate so as to draw the correct conclusion. If it is not open to debate, it is not a research question. These all make E the best answer. With specific details you can then focus on those and then draw a specific conclusion that better suits your question.