Answer:
Response: The explanatory segment discusses the answer to that question.
Explanation:
First of all, Asad needs to bear in mind the two points from the textbook which are as follows:
1) People listening to a speaker focus more on the thoughts and ideas of a speaker than on the subtle elements of his or her transmission.
2) A significant portion of the discomfort of a speaker is not perceptible to the audience.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
The easiest method is to substitute each option in place of tolerated. That being said, C doesn't make sense because it sounds wrong- "it was no longer already tolerated" isn't grammatically correct.
B doesn't sound right but there's (technically) nothing wrong with the grammar.
Tolerate means you ARE able to accept or endure something. Tolerable is the adjective version of that.
This can be tricky because you may think it's asking for the meaning of the phrase and not the word tolerable. It's only asking for tolerable.
That being said, A and B are the opposite meaning of tolerable- they mean you cannot endure it, which is the opposite.
D is the answer.
Third person omniscient narrators know absolutely everything about the story and all things related to it. Basically its the god of the story.