U want us to write one or do you have one that ur gonna say
Answer:
Hello I'm
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Decoding skills are critical for reading success. Early on, readers decode slowly as they must say each sound and blend the word. After several years of practice, kids begin to decode faster. Soon, the audible sound-by-sound reading melts away. Eventually, kids utter the entire word in one utterance.
Explanation:
Here is a little example.
The teacher told Wendy that she simply needed to read aloud to her son, Jackson. He was in second grade and he had not developed decoding skills. When Jackson came across uncommon words, he used the first letter to guess. Oftentimes, if the book was new (one he hadn’t memorized) the sentences sounded like a word scramble: Henry (?) Harry (?) or is it Helen(?) went to the park (?) picnic (?) no it’s play right? Wendy thought, “But I’ve read to him since he was a baby.” The teacher didn’t want to say, “read aloud to him,” but such advice was standard protocol at the school.
The correct option is C) “The strains of the British national anthem played softly.” This sentence doesn’t have capitalization mistakes since the word “British” is in capital letters. One of the rules of capitalization is that the name of nationalities and countries is always capitalized.
The rest of the examples “Japanese”, “Peruvian”, “Aztec” are incorrect since none of them are capitalized.
Answer:
l believe all lives should be treated equaly, because everyone my loving God put on this earth should be heard and loved. lt does not matter the color of our skin.