Triangles: The Bermuda Triangle

790 Words2 Pages

Triangles seem like complex shape to understand although they happen to be the most simple shapes in geometry because, they come in many different varieties such as, equilateral (3 equal sides; 3 equal angles always 60 degrees), isosceles (only 2 equal sides;2 equal angles), and scalene (no equal sides; no equal angles). Triangles also come in a variety of angles, acute (all angles are less than 90 degrees), right (has a right angle) , and obtuse ( has an angle more than 90 degrees). A triangle is a polygon with three edges and three vertices. As complicated as the information above seems to be the triangle is one of the basic shapes in geometry.

The shape that makes up bundles of things in this phenomenal world. The most horrific, haunted and hair-raising place in the entire world happens to be in the shape of a triangle. The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, known to be one of the most treacherous and mysterious places known to man. This region of the world is also known as one of the most powerful
Ethos is an appeal to ethics, and it is a means of convincing someone of the character or credibility of the persuader. Pathos is an appeal to emotion, and is a way of convincing an audience of an argument by creating an emotional response. Logos is an appeal to logic and is a way of persuading an audience by reason. Logos (logic/reason/proof), structure of the speech, references to studies, statistics, case studies. Ethos (credibility/trust), personal branding, confidence in delivery, cites, credible sources. Pathos (emotions/values), stories, inspirational quotes, vivid language. Authors tend to use ethos to show the audience/viewers that he/she is a credible and is worth focusing in and listening to. An author will usually use pathos to invoke sympathy from an audience; to make the audience feel what the author is feeling, the author is drawing pity from the viewers so to speak. Authors use logos when they are citing

Open Document