Answer:
A
Explanation:
A transcript of the speech is the only source mentioned here that would state verbatim what Angel Ramirez said in her valedictory speech. A local newspaper article would probably only mentioned that Angel was the valedictorian.
A journal about the graduation might perhaps highlight the important takeaway messages from the speech, but would not include the whole thing. The index cards would include prompts from the speech to keep Angel on track, but would say relatively little about the overall message.
Answer:
<em>are </em><em>really</em><em> </em><em>good</em><em>:</em><em>)</em>
<em>btw </em><em>thanks</em><em> for</em><em> the</em><em> points</em>
Answer:
An explanation of evidence
Explanation:
When we're writing a paragraph (about the theme of a text, for example), we can use the PIE structure. Each of these letters stands for one part of the paragraph:
- P - point - the main idea (the theme);
- I - information/illustration - information that supports (illustrates) the point (like quotes in the given example);
- E - explanation - explanation about how the illustration supports the point.
Based on the given information, we can see that the given paragraph doesn't contain the explanation. We have the theme and examples that illustrate it, but there is no explanation that connects them.
Answer: Sarai should choose the first one.
Explanation: It appeals to people's emotions but also gives information to Sarai's cause.