<span>"Broken electronics...globe."
</span><span>"Many electronics....harmful chemicals."
These support the claim because they both address why E-waste is harmful. The cell phone reason is more about people not having them rather than their harm to the ecosystems. Cans, plastic, and paper are not considered E-waste so it doesn't support the claim.</span>
Answer:
The author develops his claim by including the example of his childhood by telling how important it is switch the communication style while in different cultural settings.
Explanation:
"Learning How To Code-Switch: Humbling, But Necessary
" is an article written by Eric Deggans. The article talks about the importance of switching communication style while being in different cultural settings.
<u>In this article, the author includes his childhood experience when he would include the word 'guys' while speaking with his poor and black neighborhood. For them the word 'guys' was a white men word, thus the author was ridiculed for making use of that word in his black neighborhood. </u>
<u>By including this example of his childhood, the author is trying to develop a claim of how important it is switch the codes while being in different cultural settings. And to learn how to switch the codes.</u>
The language system is semantics. "Coke" v.s "Sprite." are two different words, so we are focusing on a word. When Anna paused, she was confused because to Melinda, A Coke means a Sprite in her vocabulary. She wanted to confirm the same meaning. Semantics involves a changing meaning depending on the person. She is visiting from Alabama, so the meanings may have chosen just like dialects. Thus, it cannot be phonology/morphology, syntax, or pragmatics.
George Herbert, "The Collar" - cacophony
John Donne, Sonnet 10 - paradox
John Donne, "The Sun Rising" - hyperbole
Andrew Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress" - carpe diem
John Donne, "The Flea" - synecdoche