Having a vivid picture of a setting, person, object etc and the ability to create a detail and clear description of said thing or said person. But that's just what I think.
Answer:
A speech at a rally
Explanation:
People attending a rally are trying to make a viewpoint clear to other people, and to persuade them into taking the side of the ralliers. Because of this, speakers at a rally will want to make their claims and arguments as persuading and acceptable as possible to others. Because they are presenting information in a way that would favor one side over another, they would be biased.
I believe the answer is D.
The guest are happy that they are able to wall off themselves from the world containing the Red Death. They planned to live and dance in luxury until disease died out. The only thing halting their excitement was the ominous clock chimes where all would stop until it ended.
An employs an intricate and piquant irony to develop these themes. Irony
especially surrounds Lindo. An immigrant, Lindo is a proud repository
of traditional Chinese values, which she nostalgically proclaims as
superior to the values of the United States. One of her tenets is that
strong people should remain silent, a behavioral strategy she inherits
from Sunzi’s classic <em>Sunzi Bingfa</em> (probably 475-221 b.c.e.; <em>Sun Tzu: On the Art of War</em>, 1910); as Lindo indicates in another tale in <em>The Joy Luck Club</em>, her maiden name is Sun. Ironically, however, when Waverly is featured on the cover of <em>Life</em> magazine, Lindo cannot keep silent about her daughter’s prowess and pridefully