Answer:
D
Explanation:
if there's something wrong with a customers order then the staff need to communicate
Answer:
the use of youth culture slang
Explanation:
The diction of a text refers to the use of specific words that the author used to facilitate contact with his audience, to highlight an element in the text, or to structure the text according to the intended objective. In the text above, we can see that the author used several slang terms from youth culture as the main feature of textual diction. The author did this to bring the text closer to the intended audience and make this text more adapted to that audience, with words easily identified by it.
<span>A) Ashley hopes to win the approval of her coach by switching positions on her volleyball team.
Hope this helps!</span>
The answer would have to be D, unchallenging due to its context. The author is describing a final word that is described as something that is obvious (the reader can’t ignore it).
Therefore, within that context, the adjective would have to be something that “grabs” the readers’ attention. That would obviously rule out commonplace, which, by name alone doesn’t catch you as something unable to ignore. Oddly that answers B and C are the same, but can also be ruled out quickly within context. “Comfort” also suggests that it is almost redundant, but certainly not something to keep an audiences’ attention.
The only answer, therefore, that answer that makes sense within context, as well as providing an eye-keeping ending for a conclusion paragraph would be unchallenging.