Answer:
Ambiguity
Explanation:
I think we learned this in 3rd grade or something but uh.. I'm pretty sure that's a quotation mark. it just came to mind.
Answer:
- False information given to large groups of people does not directly affect science, but it does feed into a larger pool of misinformation.
Explanation:
- Bad information given to a group of normal people is a lot different than being given to a group of scientists.
- Information is most reliable when based on facts and evidence, but does not need to soley rely on those factors to be true.
- At the end of the day it's an equation
bad information + normal people = uneducated people
bad information + scientists = a large chain affect until it is corrected
So the countering factor is the audience.
Answer:
If you want to advocate for an issue, you can use both spoken and written language, in a way that is persuasive.
Explanation:
This can be done in several ways. You can turn to more emotional techniques, or you can use arguments and reason, or even both. For spoken language, it is probably better to use more of the first, while for written language it is probably better to use more arguments and more evidence, since the nature of communication changes depending on the type of language that is used.
In 1999, Steve Gowan spotted something clinging to his fishing nets. It was a very old bottle containing two letters written by Private Thomas Hughes, dated September 9, 1914. The first message asked the person that found the bottle to forward the second message to Hughes' wife, Elizabeth. The note for Elizabeth was a nice, simple love letter, showing that his wife was in his thoughts as he made his way to France to fight in the early days of World War I.
emily_bottleAfter reading the letters, Gowan felt a great personal responsibility to see that they found their way home, even though he assumed Mrs. Hughes had died long ago. He began searching for her descendants and soon learned that Thomas and Elizabeth Hughes' daughter was still alive in Auckland, New Zealand.
Sadly, Hughes died in battle shortly after he wrote the letters, so he never got to see Elizabeth, nor his two-year old daughter, Emily, ever again. Due to her young age at the time of his death, Emily never knew her father, though she grew up listening to stories about him from her mother and cherishing his posthumously award medals. So when The New Zealand Post offered to send Gowan to Auckland to hand deliver the bottle to Emily, he jumped at the chance to help her connect to this lost piece of her past.
For Emily, the bottle was a great source of joy and comfort. She said her father's message couldn't come home "until the right boat came along at the right time with the right fisherman."
Answer:
"Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,"
Explanation:
You are welcome