Appositive is a form of rhetorical device with a noun or pronoun followed by another noun and pronoun that renames or identifies it. Based on Brokaw’s speech, “Francis Fukuyama, the provocative student of social and historical trends, has given voice to concerns of many, most recently in a long article in The Atlantic Monthly” (441). As shown from Brokaw’s speech, Francis Fukuyama is a person followed by another description and describing “provocative student” and defined who he is. Brokaw use appositive approach to introduce Francis Fukuyama when he ask, “Did we win the war?” Fukuyama knows what happened due to his acquired knowledge on social and historical
Appositive is a form of rhetorical device with a noun or pronoun followed by another noun and pronoun that renames or identifies it. Based on Brokaw’s speech, “Francis Fukuyama, the provocative student of social and historical trends, has given voice to concerns of many, most recently in a long article in The Atlantic Monthly” (441). As shown from Brokaw’s speech, Francis Fukuyama is a person followed by another description and describing “provocative student” and defined who he is. Brokaw use appositive approach to introduce Francis Fukuyama when he ask, “Did we win the war?” Fukuyama knows what happened due to his acquired knowledge on social and historical