It is with pleasure that I provide a letter of recommendation for Devincee Anderson. I have the opportunity of being a co-worker with him while he is currently employing at Division of Youth Services as a Youth Services Specialist-II. Devincee is extremely dedicated to the committed youths, detailed oriented, self-motivated, and deeply compassionate. Devincee is a natural leader and always meeting his deadlines. Devincee is an intelligent and motivated individual.
Dear Middlesex Hospital Administrative Fellowship Committee, It is with noble satisfaction that I write this letter as a recommendation for Mr. Lance Y. Troh who has shown great enthusiasm for leadership within the healthcare industry. As a former student of one of my courses at New York Medical College, Mr. Troh demonstrated his passion for leadership within the health system by firming advocating a transparent healthcare system that delivers result and reduce defects. Mr. Troh is an excellent candidate for the Administrative Fellowship Program because of his experience within the healthcare environmental and critical thinking skills that are essential in today 's competitive healthcare market. Furthermore, Mr. Troh is ready to hit the ground
William Penn and Daniel Pastorius Letter’s In the two letters William Penn and Daniel Pastorius both had great points to get people to come to Pennsylvania. They included the great soil for harvest, abundance of food and crops, plenty of land for whatever the people may need. But on the other hand Daniel Pastorius also gave us an insight to how rough the travel will be . Which letter did the best job in promoting the settlement?
In paragraphs 33 to 44 of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s response to “A Call for Unity,” a declaration by eight clergymen, “Letter from Birmingham Jail” (1963), he expresses that despite his love for the church, he is disappointed with its lack of action regarding the Civil Rights Movement. Through powerful, emotionally-loaded diction, syntax, and figurative language, King adopts a disheartened tone later shifts into a determined tone in order to express and reflect on his disappointment with the church’s inaction and his goals for the future. King begins this section by bluntly stating that he is “greatly disappointed” (33) with the church, though he “will remain true to it as long as the cord of life shall lengthen” (33). By appealing to ethos and informing the audience of his history with the church, he indicates that he is not criticizing the church for his own sake, but for the good of the church.
Thank you for your letter dated August 4, 2015, informing my staff and I of your new position as a Human Services Coordinator I/Transition Counselor with the South Carolina Commission for the Blind, effective September 2, 2015. We are very excited for you and hope your tenure will be long and
Dear President Truman, I am writing to you about dropping an atomic bomb in Japan that could potentially kill people. I understand that making a decision like this can be difficult which is why I have a few suggestions on why you should attack Japan with an atomic bomb. Japan wanted certain pacific islands such as Pearl Harbor and so they attacked on December 7th, 1941.
In the persuasive letter to his wife, John Downe uses several rhetorical devices such as diction, hyperbole, and juxtaposition as well as several tones to convince her to emigrate to the United States. In the first paragraph, Downe uses diction and an inviting tone using words like ¨welcome¨ in order to describe what life in America is like. Downe uses long sentences to list examples of specific inexpensive items. He conveys America as a land bountiful in opportunity using the hyperbole
Many people and or things were effected during the American Revolution. This is the time Abigail Adams wrote a letter to her son who is going on a trip with his father. In this letter she gives her son some advice like making mistakes in life to making your own path. Adams provides examples to help illustrate these ideas better.
Dear Mr Parks: I am an eighth grade student at River Bluff Middle School. I am writing this letter because I believe you should display Claudette Colvin's original police report. Claudette Colvin grew up in Alabama and faced severe discrimination. When she was fifteen years old, she refused to give up her seat to a white woman on a city bus and was arrested. The police who arrested her lied in the report saying she had assaulted them when she had not.
Something strange happened tonight. I was on the way home from the funeral and I saw Dimmesdale on the scaffold! He noticed Pearl and I and he asked if we would join him on the scaffold! He extended his hand to us.
Martin Luther King Jr. uses a good variety of pathos and repetition in his “Letter From Birmingham” to show the values of civil disobedience to the readers. “Throughout the state of Alabama all types of conniving methods are used to prevent Negros from being registered voters and there are some counties without a single negro registered to vote despite the fact that the negro constitutes a majority of the population’’(page 8). The use of Negro as a repetition is shown as not using the word person, man, or woman, but as using the word as separated more segregated word. The African Americans in this time would not get the same rank as white people so the overuse of this word would provide evidence. “One is a force of compliancy made up of Negros
Re: Letter of Recommendation for Joshua Whiting To The RA Selection Committee: I write on behalf of Joshua Whiting’s application for a Resident Assistant position. I believe Josh to be an exemplary student-scholar as well as a person of tremendous character with significant leadership skills. I met Josh in my first semester of college in our biology class. We were both Biochemistry majors so we got to skip Biology 1 and therefore were both new to this new world of college but already in a group full of sophomores and students who had been in college for multiple semesters. Naturally we gravitated to each other due to this aspect we had in common.
Me: Thank you Dr. Butler for this very insightful interview. I will be sure to send you a transcript of this for your own records. Have a wonderful
In Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter From Birmingham Jail” and “I Have a Dream” speech he uses many different rhetorical devices. He uses rhetorical devices such as repetition, analogy, and rhetorical questions. In each writing, he uses the devices for many different purposes. These purposes can be similar, or different. In short, Martin Luther King Jr. includes rhetorical devices in his writing.
The article I read was the last words of a prison inmate. He has written the letter to his mother., condoning her for his upbringing. How her actions help lead him to the life he had, and the actions he did. It was a great example of the right and wrong parents should teach their parents. As well as an outcry for education to strengthen, both the parent and the child alike.