The statement that best describes the fallacy in this passage is (A) Justice Taney assumes that the writers of the Constitution would agree with him about citizenship.
Explanation:
The term fallacy is the use to show /support a invalid o, wrong or faulty reasoning, or "a wrong move"
Justice Taney claims that black people could not become the citizens of America , even though they have gained their freedom, because the Founders of american wanted it to happen. When the constitution was written the Black people never wanted to become the citizens . In the course this statement was not true, thus it is a fallacy statement.
Thus, The statement that best describes the fallacy in this passage is (A) Justice Taney assumes that the writers of the Constitution would agree with him about citizenship.
Hello, the answer here would be "slant rhyme". It cannot be a "strict rhyme" because it is not strict, the rhyme changes throughout the poem, it doesn't follow the same scheme. It isn't "internal rhyme" as well, because the words don't rhyme within a single line. It isn't a "double rhyme" because these are all monosyllabic words (one syllable) and for it to be a double rhyme there needs to be at least to syllables in a word. So the only option is "slant rhyme", which isn't exactly rhyming, for example, "dear" and "door" would be considered slant rhyme.
Answer: um i am very confused
Explanation: it does not actually show the sample sentence
She uses her past experiences to give us an idea of how strong women truly are. When she dose this she involves emotional situation to get the audience drown in emotionally, which draws more people to want to support. When she add the part about being a mother and the strength that involved, she was able to connect with mothers everywhere.Women's right was all about allowing women to have the rights that men had, and she uses logic by telling the audience about how both women and men were enslaved and women were able to physically keep up with the men. By explaining things the way she did she made a great case for women's rights.
Hope this helps!