Allusion.
Both examples come from the Bible. The first comes from the Old Testament and the second from the New. You have to be a little knowledgeable of the Bible to catch on to either one of them (or be good with Google).
<span>The stripes on the American flag are white and red is the only choice where the verb properly agrees with the subject. All of the other choices have verbs that are used incorrectly.</span>
<span>Read the excerpt. And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country. Which rhetorical device in this excerpt from John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Address is being used? I would say antithesis is being used by JFK ie by turning the question around of what your country can do for you to what you can do for your country he grabs the interest of the audience by coming up with the opposite meaning.</span>
Answer:
D
Explanation:
D shows us all the traits of a thesis statement
1.States Main Idea.
2.Supports the main idea.
3.Includes an opposing viewpoint.
Hope this helps :)
Answer:
Noun clauses are dependent clauses acting as nouns. They begin with words such as how, that, what, who, whoever, whom, where, when, whether, which, whichever and why. What is more, they can act as subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, predicative nominatives or as objects of prepositions.
Taking all this into account, the noun clauses found in the sentences presented are the following ones: "whatever you do" and "what she should major in at college". In both cases, the noun clauses in question are actings as the subjects of the sentences.