American Psychological Association format for referencing the work of a book author is as follows:
- Calvin D. (2018). <em>Samuel Clemens: An American Icon. </em>Woodworth Press.
Modern Language Association format for referencing the work of a book author is:
- Calvin, Dean. <em>Samuel Clemens: An American Icon. </em>Woodworth Press, 2018.
Depending on the format you are using for your work, the referencing style in the works-cited list entry can take any of the above forms.
In the American Psychological Association format the style is
Last name and first name initial. (Date of publication). <em>The title of the work in italics.</em> Publisher.
Using the Modern Language Association format the style goes thus:
Last Name, First Name. <em>Title of Book in italics.</em> City of Publication, Publisher, Publication Date.
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brainly.com/question/18007772
The mode of persuasion "ethos" appeals to beliefs or ideals of a community and also an authority figure's character or credibility to influence individuals through morals.
In the famous play "Julius Caesar", Mark Anthony changed the opinion of the Romans by making them hate Brutus and the conspirators using "ethos" to put their credibility on the spot with irony and sarcasm when he repeatedly calls them "Honorable Men"; on the other hand he praise Caesar's loyalty to him when he calls him "His faithful friend", making people empathize with his character.
By describing actions such as "seemed to look each of us in the eye"
<span>The question is asking us to re-write the sentence "Mustafa is an excellent long-distance runner, and the race was won by him last weekend. " The options are the following: 1) Mustafa is an excellent long-distance runner, and the race had been won by him last weekend. - there is no need for the past perfect, as the first sentence is in a present tense 2) Mustafa is an excellent long-distance runner, and he won the race last weekend. - this is the best option, there is no problem with it; 3)Mustafa is an excellent long-distance runner, and he win the race last weekend. i - this is grammatically wrong as we need a past tense in the last part; 4) Mustafa is an excellent long-distance runner, and the race was win by him last weekend - this is also wrong as you would have to say "was won"</span>