Queen Elizabeth most likely used different rhetorical appeals in her Address to the Troops at Tilbury and her Response to Parliament's Request That She Marry due to differences in audience and purpose.
Answer: Option 3.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Rhetorical appeals are also known as the ethical strategies. They are used as the modes of persuasion which is used by the speaker or the narrator in a speech or a novel.
They are the devices that classify the speaker's appeal to the audiences. The different rhetorical appeals are known as the ethos, pathos, logos and the least used one is kairos.
<span>We presume this because of appearance. This was probably a dream or fantasy. She appeared that way but it doesn't mean she was really wealthy. She could have been wealthy of heart and soul. Just cannot say or presume by appearance alone. We sometimes can judge or presume that something is not really what it appears to be. But regardless, it is a compliment to her in every way.</span>
The sentence that uses parallel structures is B) My three favorite activities are writing, reading, and going to the library.
A parallel structure means that the same form of a verb is used in a sentence, and as you can see, here only gerunds are used - writing, reading, going - they all have -ing in the end.
The other sentences don't have a parallel structure because they don't use the same forms.
Answer:
I cannot write the paragraph for you but i can give you some points
Explanation:
-the uses of subjective adjectives to cause the dog to seem scary
-only the opinion of one person who had seen the dog
-the paper headlining it with the use of beast
Hope this helps :)
1. <span>What do playwrights write to help them tell their stories? - A. stage directions (they are often written in brackets and help both the actors and the readers/audience understand the scene better)
2. </span>Why does Calpurnia try to prevent Caesar from going to the Senate House? - B. She fears that Caesar will be killed. (and she was right, his close friends have in fact betrayed him)