Question 1:
The answer is False
- Biased means that it is an <em>unfair perspective</em> and holds prejudice or only represent one side of an argument/idea
Question 2:
The answer is True
- to jump on the bandwagon means <em>to just follow what others say or do </em>
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Question 3:
The answer is Glittering Generalities
- glittering generalities is a propaganda technique that <em>appeals to emotion</em> and <em>makes things sound really good, but without any information to support it</em> (it's like taking someone's word about something)
Question 4:
The answer is card stacking
- card stacking <em>only gives good info about one thing</em> and leaves out the bad stuff
Question 5:
Plain folk and transfer
- plain folk tries to appeal to common/blue collar people (miners)
- transfer usually is propaganda in the form of images that makes people look good.
Answer: Because they don't have five feet in the line or don't have an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one like iambic pentameter requires.
Explanation: In poetry, an Iambic Pentameter is a metrical speech that has 5 feet on every line. A foot is a pair of syllables in which there is an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one.
The lines "As wicked dew as e'er my mother brushed" and "With raven’s feather from unwholesome fen" follow the rules of iambic pentameter, while the line "Upon thy wicked dam, come forth!" has just four feet, and the line "Drop on you both! A southwest blow on ye" doesn't have the unstressed syllables at first.
Answer:
the answer is Robert Walton
Which scene change is the question about specifically?
I'd say D because I think I remember that being a big part of citing works. A could be correct too. I'd look up maybe basic MLA rules and see which ones comes up first. It kinda depends on what your teach emphasizes. Though I'm pretty confident it isn't B or C