Answer:
The three-fifths compromise was compromised reached during the Constitution Convention in which 3/5 of the slave population who voted would count.
Answer:
Passage A commits a fallacy but does not commit a fallacy of equivocation or amphiboly.
Passage B commits a fallacy and specifically commits a fallacy of equivocation.
Passage C commits a fallacy but does not commit a fallacy of equivocation or amphiboly.
Passage D does not commit a fallacy
Passage E commits a fallacy and specifically commits a fallacy of amphiboly.
Explanation:
A fallacy is an argument that isn't sound because it has a faulty logic. There are many different types of fallacies. The fallacies dealt in our example here: fallacy of equivocation and fallacy of amphiboly both deal with fallacies stemming from ambiguity of words or sentences such that they can mean so many things at the same time. While fallacy of equivocation deals with fallacies resulting from ambiguity caused by use of a word that could mean so many things, fallacy of amphiboly deals with fallacies from ambiguity of phrases and sentences.
Answer:
Yes No
When it is safe, Will returns to the tavern to tell Mr. Coleman that he has brought the horses for his son Edward to deliver.
Will enjoys a breakfast of ham and eggs while he waits for the soldiers to leave the tavern.
One soldier suspects that Will might be transporting horses, but Will manages to leave safely.
Will leaves York and the horses to visit the tavern and finds it is full of British soldiers.
Explanation:
I would go with d or a as my best guess
One of journeying (with a 'Country Mile' being an indefinite distance).