Hello. You forgot to put the text to which this question refers. The text is:
Learning to play the trumpet may appear rather simple. After all, there are only three keys and a mouthpiece, right? However, many musicians will attest to the challenge of learning how to play the trumpet well. Playing the trumpet musically comes from developing what is called the embouchure (ahm-boo-shoor). This is how the player’s mouth muscles make contact with the mouthpiece and inevitably produce pleasing sounds—not noise, but beautiful tones. Remember that there are only three keys on the trumpet, so they must be pressed in multiple combinations to change pitch. Together with the musician’s lip muscles, the keys help determine pitch and quality of sound.
Some teachers insist beginning students learn the best technique by first starting with “buzzing.” A vibrating sound is made by forcing air out of the lips while they are tightly pursed. It’s not as easy as it may sound. It should be practiced first without the horn. Try doing this while changing pitches up and down the scale, or “sing-buzzing” different tunes. From this simple beginning, a student then progresses to buzzing into the mouthpiece. After success with this drill, students learn to change pitches, and with much practice will develop a decent tone when they play their trumpet. Practice is key to playing the trumpet well, despite its seeming simplicity
Answer:
B. However, many musicians will attest to the challenge of learning how to play the trumpet well.
C. After success with this drill, students learn to change pitches, and with much practice will develop a decent tone when they play their trumpet.
Explanation:
In the text the author presents arguments about how musicians feel that playing a trumpet is a great challenge, because the structure of the bugle, refers to a strong difficulty to play and generate good and decent sounds.
In the two statements above, we can see how the author of the text justifies the arguments, first he shows how the musicians prove the difficulty and secondly, he shows how it takes technique and a combination of lips and fingers to produce pleasant sounds.
By using black verse, Robert Frost accomplished to break the rules. He is often describes as a metricist.
Robert Lee Frost was an American poet. He used to write about settings from rural life in New England in the early twentieth century in an attemp to examine complex social and philosophical themes.
He was considered one of America's rare "public literary figures, almost an artistic institution;" and he received four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry.
Edgar Allen Poe's validity and reliability on the Spanish Inquisition can be made clearly through the text in "The Pit and the Pendulum". The narrator is valid because his story relates to the history of the Spanish Inquisition but unreliable because of his mental state. The Koch Blog says, " During the reign of the Catholic Monarchs, several thousand new Christians were condemned..." The narrator in the story was judged, put through hell, and tortured enough that he just wanted to end his life. As John Calvin states, "The torture of a bad conscience is the hell of a living soul."
Im not 100% but i think the answer is d. :}