D. All of the above.
Each of those items are equally important when presenting/preparing.
Answer:
D.
I think. An author should always consider their audience, without an audience there is no reason to write. Their own expertise because if they are writing about something they have absolutely no knowledge about, it is either going to end up a fiction book or just really poorly written. You want to consider what other books like yours are out there, what is the competition. And lastly, no one wants to do something they have no interest in.
Hear and near are actual rhymes.
Fen and feeds do not have the same sound.
Warm and true do not have the same sound.
The answer is swamp and damp, as they have a similar ending sound to them.
The ad uses two aspects that help you empathize with the boy.
First that lots of people have problems with speaking in public. Shaking, blushing and sweating are usual consequences of this issue. Blushing is the "cutest" of these symtoms, and this, happening with a school-aged boy helps you relate.
Which leads to the next aspect: everybody in the target of the ad has already been a child, and all the issues and memories that it implies. A 50 year old politician blushing before a speech would not be as persuasive...
Therefore, in the three-way persuasive techniques list (along with Ethos and Logos), the "Pathos" is the one mostly used by the ad.
In the longer list, "appeals" and 'cliches" are clearly used.
<span>A. A simile uses "like" or "as" to make comparisons and a metaphor doesn't.
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