Answer:
Dialogic reading is just children and adults having a conversation about a book. Children will enjoy dialogic reading more than traditional reading as long as you mix-up your prompts with straight reading, vary what you do from reading to reading, and follow the child's interest.
Explanation:
<span>What is one way to analyze a writer’s sentence structure?
</span><span>-language registers,
-literary devices,
-figures of speech.</span>
Answer:
Visuals that pop out, engage the audience’s attention, while fitting with the overall theme of the presentation
Explanation:
<em>This is like a story plus a claim following your requests. Hope it helps you, though.</em>
<h3>We call the meeting to order

11:42 AM</h3>
This is the case-claim of the missing french fries. It happened last Sunday, when I made a claim that I witnessed frozen french fries being stolen by a group of people at a store. The store retrieved the fries on Wednesday <em>today</em>. Thankfully, they were not damaged. Still in good condition, still edible. "What evidence is there"? Good question, I saw it at the store and recorded it. I presented the recording, and all is well that ends well!
<em>This claim is not based on an actual case. This is fictional, and any relation to an actual person is purely coincedential.</em>
<span>A. A combination of Lord Byron's poetry and her husband's insistence on writing
B. A combination of depression, personal loss, and a desire for fame
C. A combination of Polidori's story and delirium caused by an illness
D. A combination of a vividly terrifying nightmare and a discussion of Darwin
c</span>