Answer:
the anwser is B, "similarily"
Explanation:
because it links one part of the paragraph to the next talking about how talking on the phone can have the same fatal effects as texting when driving.
1.) From 1931 to 1973, the Empire state building was the tallest building in the world, a title now claimed by Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
2.) The Eiffel Tower was named in honor of its architect, Gustave Eiffel, who lived from 1832 to 1923.
Answer:
“Alfred Sewell ended his discussion of Chicago with a stirring prediction: ‘The city will nevertheless rise again, nay, is already rising, like the Phoenix, from her ashes. And she will, we believe, be a better city as well as a greater one, than she was before her disaster.’”
This is the best option because it gives the feeling of hope. The image of the Phoenix rising out of the ashes is meant to show that Chicago will once rise again. It will come back and be even better. The quote says that the city will "rise again" and "is already rising". Two of the other options only speak of the devastation of the fire. The option about the workers tells about the demand for laborers but it doesn't necessarily evoke a sense of hope in rebuilding.
Answer:
MLK argued, when he spoke the words “America had given the Negro people a bad check,” that the United States has promised all people a promise of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Notice that the words thus spoke do not specify people of any particular race, but all men. Men, meaning people.
Explanation:
The answers are: It does not allow listeners to interpret each character through his or her tone; and it does not allow listeners to review or reread what each character has said.
When hearing the characters voices out loud, and in the hypothetical case that it is a live audition and not a recording, one, as part of the audience, does not have, evidently, the possibility of reviewing or rereading what each character says. This may seem vane, but in reality, it can be very important when reading since sometimes the sense of what´s being read is so profound that, in order to capture in full, one needs to review a certain passage.
Also, hearing the characters has the disadvantage of making their voices concrete and specific according to whoever is speaking. This leaves out the possibility of filling the character´s voice with one´s own imagination, wit, and fantasy, which usually are very important characteristics of a fictional character (literature, in the end, is always a very subjective activity on the side of the reader).