It would be true !! i read the book last year and answered this on a final !
Answer:
C.
Explanation:
"The Selective Laziness Of Human Reasoning" is an article written by Tania Lombrozo. The aticle talks about how people tend to focus on the flaws of others argument than evaluating their own arguments. To prove this thesis, a research was conducted by the researchers in which the choice blindness concept was adopted. The choices that were made by the participants were swaped and mostly people failed to recognize the swap and presented their argument over the choice that they did not make previously.
<u>The correct option to support the claim of the main idea of the text is C. When the choices made by participants were swapped and not recognized by them, they produced the argument over the choice that they did not make and were critical about the arguments they produced when they were coming from others</u>.
So, the correct answer is option C.
Take a picture so i can see the passage
In order to evaluate how an actor interprets a character it is important for the audience to ask themselves these three things:
1. Which words does the actor emphasize? <em>(1)</em>
- This helps the audience identify which words the actor thinks are most important to help establish the tone and meaning of the character's words.
2. What gestures and movements does the actor make? (5)
- People often say that actions speak louder than words, so how the actor portrays the character's non-verbals shows a lot about how the actor believes the character to be.
3. What emotions does the actor convey? (6)
- The characters in the story show different emotions that go along with the storyline or help explain something unwritten. So, when an actor shows emotions they are helping to evolve the character within the story.
The other options: "What makes this a talented actor?", "How old is the actor?" , and "In what other productions has the actor appeared?" do not have to do with how the character is interpreted, but rather the actor themselves or the casting for the character.
A simile is first defined as a type of speech that uses one thing or
phrase with comparisons to things of an unrelated kind, often in order
to make a more vivacious description. So of the phrases above, only the
last one (I swear she cast a shadow white as stone) would be considered a
simile, as a shadow white as stone takes two unrelated things and uses
them in an interesting way.