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We need more female superheroes. The ones we have are rarely given the same narrative time as their male counterparts, and they are usually presented in outfits that appeal to men. I propose we create more female superheroes with their own stories, their own powers, and their own choice of outfit. Should they get equal narrative space . . . or not? Did you answer yes in a Flash? Can you quote one female superhero? Do you know her backstory like kryptonite or spider bites? If your answer is no, then it’s time for more narrative time and backstory for our female superheroes.
Which techniques does the author most use to advance their purpose? Select the two correct answers.

(1 point)
Responses

allusion
allusion

ellipsis
ellipsis

description
description

connotation
connotation

point of view

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Allusion and point of view.

- Allusion: references like "Flash," "kryptonite," and "spider bites" invoke well-known (mostly male) superheroes to highlight the imbalance.
- Point of view: the author uses first- and second-person address ("I propose," "Did you answer...," "If your answer is no") to engage and persuade the reader.