English, 05.07.2019 19:30, ladypink94
Authors rarely state the central idea in narrative nonfiction. how can a reader find the central idea when the author doesn’t state it explicitly? to find the central idea, you look for outside resources about the text and try to determine it through their analysis. to find the central idea, you look at the details in the text: what characters say and do, the events that occur, important challenges or conflicts represented, and the setting. then you think about how these details work together to build and convey a big idea or message to find the central idea, you look at the first paragraph of the story and make a guess. none of these.
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 23:10, ibrahimharoon
How does the author create a surprise ending? cite evidence from the text to support your answer.
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 04:50, koolgurl2003
Read the excerpt from hemingway’s a farewell to arms. we parked the cars beyond the brickyard. the ovens and some deep holes had been equipped as dressing stations. there were three doctors that i knew. i talked with the major and learned that when it should start and our cars should be loaded we would drive them back along the screened road and up to the main road along the ridge where there would be a post and other cars to clear them. which best describes hemingway’s style of writing in the excerpt? straightforward and simple, while still relating a lot of information to the reader long-winded and offering far too much information to the reader overly complicated, making it difficult to interpret and understand the text effortless and uncomplicated, with little meaning for the reader to interpret
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 08:00, yayrocks2395
Identify the homophone pair that needs to be corrected in these sentence
Answers: 1
Authors rarely state the central idea in narrative nonfiction. how can a reader find the central ide...
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