Answer:
Letter to a friend requesting him to not use crackers for Diwali and instead make it a safe and soundless celebration.
Explanation:
ABC Apartments
New Delhi
110007
16 Nov, 2017
My dear Sanjay,
It's been a while that we've talked and I would like to take this chance to tell you about my plans to come to Delhi for the Diwali holidays. I hope you will be there too.
And about the celebration, I was thinking maybe, this year, we will make a bit of a change in our ro ut ine. The pollution level is rising higher and our cities have become unbearable, with worse air qua lity . So, I was thinking if you could stop using Ch in es e crac kers and also even stop burning any cr ack ers.
It's not only for the pollution to o. The animals in the streets are traumat ized, and it also disrupts people who hate loud noi ses. So, instead, you can make it a safe and friendly Diwali for all, and disturbing no o n e .
I hope you can understand what I'm trying to tell you. Will see you so o n.
Take care.
Your best friend,
Ha rsh it.
The excerpt that best does that is the following one - <span>I have ploughed and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me!
This part of the speech clearly shows that this woman did a better job plowing and planting than any man ever could, and that she proved them wrong by beating them at their own game. She wants to show everyone that women are also strong and quite capable of anything, and especially voting and fighting for their rights.
</span>
It seems it is somehow humorous because the man end up saying that if you can do it on your own, you can take the car to their place and they will do it for you.
It could not be angry or annoyed because he is willing to explain and he is even making a video about it.
As regards bitter, it does not fit as a possibility for the video or his explanation of the subject.
<span>e. b and c only
As long as a speaker lets the audience know who the author of a study is, and gives a brief overview of their credentials or qualifications, the audience should be able to trust the information that the speaker is presenting, based on their credible research.</span>
Answer: Ethos.
Explanation: there are three main rhetorical strategies when giving an argument in a speech or in a text, they are pathos, logos and ethos. Pathos is appealing to the audience's emotions, logos consists in appealing to the audience's logic, and ethos is appealing to the audience's ethics. In the given excerpt from Kennedy's speech, we can see an example of Ethos, because he is using his position as president (which gives him credibility) to convince the audience.