Answer:
you should wake up earlier
Answer:
Writing terms matched to their definitions:
1. a sentence that states the main idea or subject of a paragraph: topic sentence.
2. the part of the topic sentence indicating what the paragraph will say about the topic: controlling idea.
3. all sentences in a paragraph pointing towards one idea: coherence.
4. a single idea expressed in a logical, organized way: unity.
5. the correct form of a written assignment: proper manuscript.
A and C are the correct answers.
From an out groups perspective depending on what type of people they are they could be considered mean, or crazy silly goofy or really settle people but from the out groups perspective they’ll never actually truly know your group so they can only place judgment for what they see and it could be many things as well as just being a overall good friend group
Advanced Composition' and Occasion-Sensitivity Further, people read for two reasons: entertainment or information. [ A writer who confuses, bores, or threatens the reader, "has lost that reader, usually for good." Earlier, Donald Murray's indispensable A Writer Teaches Writing (1968) focuses firmly on the target-audience. So writers, and now textbooks, embrace this pragmatism. Do the nation's writing classrooms, secondary and even collegiate, follow suit? Quite possibly not, which may suggest that advanced composition may often have a mandate to emphasize sensitivity to occasion as the keystone skill in real-world writing which it in fact is. My own foray into freelance writing in particular?77 articles in five years, but not without initial stumbles?taught me that real-world writing in general is varied, difficult, possible, necessary, satisfying. I now feel obligated to impart some of this perspective to my advanced writing students especially. ]