Answer:
Explanation:
Ad Homniem-attacking the person rather than the argument
Ad Ignorantum- when you argue that something is true because it has not been proven to be false
Ad Populum- Bandwagon
Argument from Authority- An argument that concludes something is true because a presumed expert or witness has said that it is
Hasty Generalization- drawing conclusions based on insufficient or unrepresentative evidence
Slippery Slope- a fallacy that assumes that taking a first step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented.
Straw Man- When a person ignores one actual position, and presents and exaggerated one
Red Herring- ignores question asked
False Dichotomy- argues there are only two options when really there may be many
Begging the Question- Often called circular reasoning, occurs when the believability of the evidence depends on the believability of the claim.
Make your voice count. How? talk about, write about it, contact your mp or mna or other political figures
<span>specially when human rights are violated. my concern is about children's rights -- they have a priority over </span>
<span>the other ones.</span>
From what i know B is going to be the best one of these options
<span>The correct answer is B. Erin is giving a motivational speech so she will want her delivery to be strong and upbeat, but as she is giving the speech to a large crowd of high school students (who may not be interested) in the gymnasium, there will likely be a lot of noise from the students talking and the sound may not travel well in the hall.</span>