The rhetorical device that <span>is used in this excerpt from Mark Twain's "The Danger of Lying in Bed" is anecdote (assuming that your options are allusion, rhetorical question, anecdote, and logic).
There is no allusion to any other text here, so that is not the correct answer. There are also no rhetorical questions - questions that don't need an answer because it is implied. I guess there is logic, but it is not a rhetorical device really. So, I'd choose anecdote, because an anecdote is a short, interesting story from someone's life, as is the case here.</span>
Eliezer's confidence is a result of his examinations in Jewish mystery, which show him that God is wherever on the planet, that nothing exists without God, that in actuality everything in the physical world is a "spread," or reflection, of the awesome world. At the end of the day, Eliezer has grown up trusting that everything on Earth mirrors God's sacredness and power. His confidence is grounded in the possibility that God is all around, constantly, that his heavenliness touches each part of his day by day life. Since God is great, his investigations show him, and God is wherever on the planet, the world should accordingly be great.
Answer: 1. Ella construirá nuevas casas. 2. Yo hablaba los dos idiomas. 3. Los estudiantes están haciendo esas camas. 4. Él paga algunas deudas. 5. Has tomado ese tren. 6. Estuvimos jugando fútbol ayer. 7. Susana y tú viste esas grandes películas.
Explanation:
there you go mi amigo!
cite is like quoting something
site is a place
so for me the answer is A