The options of the question are,
1.- manning of expressing ideas in words.
2.- worn out by use.
3.- words or phrases usually characterized by special vividness or coloring
4.- used in everyday informal talk, but not in formal English.
5.- stiffly dignified of formal.
6.- not definitely or precisely expressed.
a) slang
b) stilted
c) vagued
d) colloquial
e) trite
f) diction
The correct answers are,
1.- manning of expressing ideas in words: diction.
2.- worn out by use: trite.
3.- words or phrases usually characterized by special vividness or coloring: slang.
4.- used in everyday informal talk, but not in formal English: colloquial.
5.- stiffly dignified of formal: stilted.
6.- not definitely or precisely expressed: vague.
These concept san expressions refer to the good use of language. It is very important to use the correct words to convey our message. Depending of the situation, the people we are with, the social environment, we must use the correct word and the correct expression.
John Proctor has a change of heart about confessing because he believed everything that had happened went against everything he believed in. <span>John Proctor was an elderly man of 60 years of age when accused, tried, and hanged for practicing witchcraft in 1692. Hope this helps.</span>
Answer:C
Explanation: it seems that a name in a official paperwork wouldn’t be a nickname or anything like that
I think Cath is the most memorable one because she is relatable for me. I have same problems as her. She has a social anxiety disorder, and only things that makes her happy are writing her Simon Snow fan fictions for her followers and writing her fiction in writing class. So cath is a freshman in university with her outgoing sister. Her sister will stop being a fangirl so Cath will have harder time for making friends. Book shows reality of fangirls. Cath have a hard time letting go her fandoms, and being more social. So most memorable thing in the book was develop of Cath for me.
Actually neither is correct, it has to be
When I took the photo you weren't looking at me.