Answer:
Explanation:
You do want to paraphrase information. You want to make sure that you know essentially who said what.
You want to include the facts that relate to the topic. This is more to remind yourself what the facts are.
The quotations are always a good idea. You are making sure that your reader knows that you are not alone in what you think or if it is a quotation that requires a negative response, that is also good.
These are the three that you should check.
Answer:
read is to book as violation is to crime
sovereign is to monarchy as autonomy is to democracy
Talk is to converse as accept is to approve
Overthrow is to surrender as preserve is to abandon
Gloomy is to optimistic as neglectful is to regard
Explanation:
<h2>
Answer:</h2>
How could the headline best be revised to make it objective?
✔ Valido’s Conduct under Review
How could the first sentence of the article be revised to improve objectivity?
✔ by removing "unpopular" and "conservative"
How could the reporter balance Senator Saud’s comments to make the article more objective?
✔ by adding a comment from a Republican senator
(Photo for proof at the bottom.)
<h2>
Explanation:</h2>
Objective means non-biased, or free of opinions. Replacing the original headline with "Valido’s Conduct under Review" could be more objective because it does not have bribery in the name. Bribery has a negative connotation and putting it in a title is possibly attacking a person. That is my best guess for this answer, I think the original title is already objective.
Removing "unpopular" and "conservative" improves objectivity because unpopular is an opinionated word that can be used to attack someone. Conservative seems to have a negative connotation in this case, so it could be biased. Reporting information from both sides also improves objectivity, as it shows you're not leaning towards one side.
Here's a photo of Edge just incase.
I would say the answer is D) tricky.
It's not more formal in some countries to use the correct title than in others, and including the word "correct" implies that it sometimes isn't correct, which would also go along with "tricky."