Answer: capulet- Juliet, the nurse, and Tybalt. Montague- Romeo, Benvolio, and Mercutio
Explanation:
I think the answer to your question is semicolon.
If you're meaning like Greek myths and Victorian myths than it would be like
1. They're stories started by one person
2. They've been around for years now
3. They've probably been changed over time as people tend to change memories and stories each time they tell it
4. They could be a lie started by one person eons ago
The lines are spoken by <u>Friar Lawrence</u> to <u>Capulet</u>, and it refers to the heaven being bothered to <u>Capulet</u> by some past sin he committed. At the same time, <u>Friar Lawrence</u> mentions that <u>Capulet </u>should stop trying to go against heaven and stop challenging it and questioning the reasons why the wedding became a funeral.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
After re-reading Jobs' speech, the three pieces of his advice to the audience are the following.
1) Always follow your heart, not other people's voices.
2) Do not let any external voice suppress your inner voice. Your inner voice is ypur best guide.
3) Sometimes bad things happen and you think they are definitive. But the worst things could be the best things that could have happened.
Do these messages seem to hold more logos or pathos for you?
To me, the message is full of pathos from the very beginning. It is full of personal anecdotes that connect with students.
Which of the two (logos or pathos) is more powerful to you.
For me, pathos is so much more powerful because it appeals to the emotion of the audience. And audiences better react to emotion rather than reason or logic.
And that is what Steve Jobs did during his commencement speech at Stanford, in 2005.