Answer:
The listener finds it easier to make sense of the ideas presented in the text.
The listener is more engaged by the text.
The listener better recognizes when different people are quoted within the text.
Explanation:
When you're reading a text aloud and have an audience, it's very important that you're reading fluently - without too many long pauses, stuttering, and similar issues. What is also important is your tone. If you are reading for some time without changing your tone at all, your audience will stop listening. The text you are reading could be the most interesting one, but once it's presented poorly, the listeners will lose all interest.
With fluency and an adjusted tone, it's easier to listen and understand the text and its organization. Quotes are always somehow pointed out within the text, and they should be pointed out when read aloud as well.
So, the correct options are the first, third, and fifth.
<span>Janice Mirikitani suffered during the war because she was placed in an internment camp. During the war many individuals were placed in internment camps to satisfy the paranoia caused by war-time violence. Mirikitani was no different from many Japanese-Americans who were essentially held against their will.</span>
Answer:
The event with Mr. Radley and his gunshot reveals that people in Maycomb were prejudiced and racist.
Explanation:
'To Kill A Mickingbird' is a novel written by Harper Lee. The book centered around the theme of racism.
In Chapter 6, when Dill, Jem and Scoutt tries to peek into Mr. Radley's house, they hear a gunshot in the house. Mr. Radley fired the gun seeing the shadow of a man, perceiving it to be a <em>black man </em>who might have broke into his house to steal collard greens from his garden.
The theme of racism is prevalent in this event as Mr. Radley shots the gun without even thinking twice or looking whose the shadow was. Perceiving that the shadow is of a <em>black man </em>as an intruder brings forth the theme of racism in the novel and also reveals that people in Maycomb were overtly racist.
Simple......ideas and content would be the answer....