Editorials or<em> leading articles</em> are articles written by senior editorial stuff or publisher of a newspaper or magazines. Editorials are often published unsigned although the name of editor is known to the reader ( the names are listed in the newspaper ).
These types of articles are usually published on a special page called the <em>editorial page</em>. The articles are long and opinionated, they express the author's point of view on a particular topic. On the same editorial page, <em>letters</em> <em>to the editor</em>, are featured ( letters from members of the public).
The typical topics of editorials are <em>current affairs</em> ( political or economic ), or <em>current events</em> happening in their surrounding ( elections, important meetings, sport events). The editors put forth their views on a topic they feel strong about. They help the readers gain a better understanding of a particular subject.
Answer: I think C
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
Definition/Explanation Clues. Restatement/Synonym Clues. Contrast/Antonym Clues. ... Inference/General Context Clues. ... Punctuation.
Explanation:
When writing a persuasive essay (or giving a persuasive speech) the speaker should tell them what you're going to tell them, tell them, then tell them what you told them. Also the speaker should present the opposite viewpoint and then disprove that point with their point
I would go with the last one but I’m not a 100% sure. :)
According to Hoffman and Bateson, "<em>empowerment</em> is the reverse of ‘doing things by the book.’ <em>Enfranchisement</em> carries this logic even further by first <em>empowering</em> individuals and then coupling this with a reward system that recognizes people for their performance."