Answer:
Simple language that highlights the entertainment value of the game
Explanation:
The most important thing to consider when teaching or informing children about anything is to make it interesting and simple. This would keep children's interest intact and they will easily understand even difficult concepts.
Formal academic language will make the children feel bore and their interest will be lost.
Technical language will not be understood by children, hence result in their loss of interest.
Children are not much concerned about how popular they game will become. They will listen as long as it entertains their interests.
Jonas was asked to follow certain rules while he is a Receiver-in training.
<u>EXPLANATION: </u>
Jonas did not get any dreams usually. But, one dream he got at the previous night was quite embarrassing as he was asking Fiona to disrobe and get into the bathtub with him. She refused to do so in his dream.
Jonas was the Receiver of Memory for his community and he was very embarrassed because of this dream as the community is a highly structured in which they are not allowed to choose their partners and need to dress up properly.
Though Jonas's parents understood his desires but asked him to suppress them by taking a pill each day. Thus, he was asked not to share his dream.
The pointers that can be used for the essay to make it persuasive are given below:
Explanation:
The essay must be persuasive so it must employ
- Cold facts
- US has one of the high starting wages.
- There is a welfare scheme in the nation
-Strategies and pointers that must be used:
- The people of the nation usually do not fall from being rich due to safety nets.
- Any prosperous nation usually has it much easier because their prosperity had made them predisposed to have more prosperity by their own lives
- There is little relation to intelligence and richness and most people who do badly in studies can get jobs in US,
There are a lot of answers to this question depending on
the given choices to choose from. So next time please be kind enough to include
the choices. I can give you three possible answers for this question, now it
all depends on you to choose which one of these three are in the choices:
Select 1:
1. Readers are forced to consider the possible monstrous
actions inside of themselves, like hatred or prejudice.
2. The monster challenges readers to recognize that a
monster could be an ordinary person, not just an outcast.
3. Readers must consider that monsters live among them, maybe
in their own town.
We can actually see that the commonality in the three
choices tells us that the monster does not really refer to the monsters
depicted in fiction. However, monsters could be just ordinary person, it could
even perhaps refer to us. What makes us a monster is our personality, not our
appearance.
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