What does Scout<span> find unusual about </span>Calpurnia's<span> manner of speaking at the Negro church? ... Atticus says </span>Aunt Alexandra<span> is doing him a </span>favor<span> because he cannot be home all day, ... </span>Aunt Alexandra<span> wants </span>Scout<span> and </span>Jem<span> to have pride in being a Finch, they should ... What question </span>does<span> Atticus </span>ask<span> the sheriff three times?</span>
Certain models have been designed to explain how we process speech. The blank in the sentence has been filled below:
- A significant shortcoming of the three cueing systems model, compared to the four-part processing model, is that it obscures the role of <u>phonological processing</u> in word recognition.
The three cueing systems model is thought by language instructors who show that students can understand words better by examining;
- Their semantics that is meaning of words,
- Their syntax, and
- Their grapho-phonics composition which is about visualization.
The four-part processing model is higher as it evaluates, meaning, context, phonology, and orthography. Phonology is not accounted for in the three cueing systems.
Learn more here:
brainly.com/question/18473765
The Catholic Church in the Philippines (Filipino: Simbahang Katolika sa Pilipinas; Spanish: Iglesia Católica en las Filipinas) is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual direction of the Pope. The Philippines is one of the two nations in Asia having a substantial portion of the population professing the Catholic faith, along with East Timor, and has the third largest Catholic population in the world after Brazil and Mexico.[1] The episcopal conference responsible in governing the faith is the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines.
Christianity was first brought to the Philippine islands by Spanish missionaries and settlers, who arrived in waves beginning in the early 16th century in Cebu. Compared to the Spanish Era, when Christianity was recognized as the state religion, the faith today is practiced in the context of a secular state. In 2015, it was estimated that 84 million Filipinos, or roughly 82.9% to 85% of the population, profess the Catholic faith