The speech-thought differential is the difference between how fast you think and how fast the speaker talks.
This "thought-speech gap" or "listening gap" means that the brain has extra capacity and WILL process information using that extra capacity. For example, a listener can process a lot of non-verbal cues. Great listeners will observe such cues and use them to guide the conversation to fit their communication goals.
But the difference in how quickly people speak and how quickly they listen also creates an opportunity for the brain's cognitive biases to operate and shape the listener's perception. I've written before about some of the cognitive biases that can occur especially when listening. See the Listen Like a Lawyer blog posts here and here and here on cognitive biases such as the well-known confirmation bias.
Hence, the correct answer is Option A.
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Answer:
2) The urgent need that needs to be fixed or resolved; something that needs to be done.
Explanation:
The term <em>rhetorical situation</em> refers to any situation that involves at least one person using some sort of communication to modify the perspective of their audience (at least one other person).
In the rhetorical situation, exigence (from Latin <em>exigere</em> -<em> to demand or require</em>) is an issue, problem, or situation that needs to be resolved and causes someone to write or speak in the first place. An example of exigence is the message from an environmental activist that we need to use less plastic bags.
A) Sees
Try both options to see which makes sense. "He see them there every day" doesn't make sense. "He sees them there every day" does make sense.
It means that in the darkness, there is a sort of tension, a foreshadowing of the coming events, that make the night seem not as quiet and settled as you would expect a night by the beach to be; tells of unhappy things to come and is in sharp contrast to the green light; makes mood more depressing/unsettling