A, B, and in some cases even D
The speaker in “Kubla Khan” describes a <span>vision he has had that describes </span><span>the “stately pleasure-dome” built in Xanadu.</span>
Answer:
Sentence A.
Explanation:
When using someone else's thoughts, ideas, sentences etc. in your work, it's necessary to avoid plagiarism, by properly quoting them.
There are basically two essential things to pay attention to:
- when paraphrasing someone one must put internal quotation just after the paraphrased piece of information. Internal quotation consists at least of the author's last name and page number from which the information was taken.
- when quoting someone (using his work word-by-word), the quoted content must be placed between quotation marks, followed by internal quotation.
Of course, regardless of the internal quotation, the proper citation must be provided at the end of the work, in the citation list.
So, with all this in mind, we can see that sentence A failed to obey these rules, which marks it as plagiarism.
Answer:
Tweets (Twitter messages) describing the overthrow of Ben Ali at the time it happened.
Journal entries from a student describing how social media helped him join a protest
.
Quotations from experts on social media use during uprisings within the Arab world.
Explanation:
The given passage from "The Role of Social Media in the Arab Uprising" presents a claim by the authors that social media helped intensify the spread of the projection of Arab Uprising. Heather Brown, Emily Guskin, and Amy Mitchell present the claim that social media platforms allows greater coverage and spread awareness about the political turmoil.
Some pieces of evidence can help support their claim. First is the <u>tweet messages that describe the overthrow of Ben Ali when it happened</u>. This allows the electronic evidence that provides support to the claim. Moreover, a <u>student's journal entry that describes how he was influenced to join a protest through social media </u>and <u>experts' quotations on social media use during the turmoil </u>all help in providing validation to the claims made.
Thus, the <u>correct answers are the first, fourth and fifth options.</u>
Answer:
Compare and contrast written and performed versions of a text. Assessed regularly in .... -“Rikki-Tikki-Tavi” short story by Rudyard Kipling. -“All Summer in a Day” short story ... -“Casey's Revenge” poem by Grantland Rice. -“The Wreck of the ...
Explanation: