<span>Because the rest of your doesn't seem to have been written here, I must assume the allusion you are referring to is </span>possibly from this line; Hamlet calls Polonius Jephthah, after the priest in the Old Testament who sacrifices his daughter to God. This allusion suggests <span>Polonius is sacrificing his daughter to trick Hamlet.</span>
<span>D. He is appealing to the audience's sense of logic.
Appealing to the audience's sense of logic is called logos, and it is an important part of the Rhetorical Triangle. Audiences need logic, facts, statistics in order to trust the information that the speaker is presenting. The use of statistics here is appealing to that logic. </span>
Answer:
The definite article (the) is used before a noun to indicate that the identity of the noun is known to the reader. The indefinite article (a, an) is used before a noun that is general or when its identity is not known. There are certain situations in which a noun takes no article.
Explanation:
<span>The following best describes a vocabulary system called Word Forms:
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B. Learn how a root word changes when used as a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb to learn multiple related words at the same time.