Identify the type of change illustrated.
Propaganda. Originally, propaganda meant a system for propagating (spreading) religious doctrines, then any kind of
ideas. As used today, it generally means the dissemination of political opinions for the purpose of biasing judgment
(brainwashing) a. amelioration
b. pejoration
c. generalization
d. specialization
Answers: 3
English, 21.06.2019 20:20
What evidence could be used to support the authors'claims in this excerpt? select three options.- tweets (twitter messages) describing the overthrow ofben ali at the time it happened- verifiable facts that explain that social media haslittle effect on citizen journalism-speeches that give biographical accounts of the life andaccomplishments of mubarak-journal entries from a student describing how socialmedia him join a protest- quotations from experts on social media use duringuprisings within the arab world
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 07:30
Read the passage below and answer the question. jake was incredibly loquacious. he once gave a twenty minute monologue about his favorite movie. in the passage above, the context clue used to find the definition of loquacious is an example of an antonym an example a synonym the tone of the whole phrase
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 08:30
At four hundred miles they stopped to eat, at a thousand miles they pitched their camp. they had traveled for just three days and nights, a six weeks' journey for ordinary men. this excerpt is repeated several times. how does this repetition affect the epic?
Answers: 3
Identify the type of change illustrated.
Propaganda. Originally, propaganda meant a system for...
Propaganda. Originally, propaganda meant a system for...
History, 11.07.2019 20:30
English, 11.07.2019 20:30
English, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
History, 11.07.2019 20:30
Spanish, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30
Mathematics, 11.07.2019 20:30