In general, close reading helps the reader to truly understand a text. Part of close reading is what is called analysis, which literally means to dissect or look at all the parts to understand the whole. Through close reading, a reader dissects a text thus penetrating through its layers of meaning.
Answer:
(A)
Explanation:
You need to share the main article, as well.
I am pretty sure it narrows down to (A) or (D), and based on the context, I would say it is going to be (A).
I have assumed that the main article is about piggybacking and how it influences to implement habits.
I might be able to help better if I had the article in my disposal.
"Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl" by Harriet Jacobs has a classic, conversational and realistic style in which the reader feels as if he were talking to the protagonist. The narration is simple and attractive as in "I was born a slave, but I never new it till six years of happy childhood has passed away". Another key stylistic feature is the directness when addressing the reader as in "Reader, did you ever rate? I hope not".
Answer:
Using corresponding grammatical structure
Explanation:
parallel, parallelism, etc. means corresponing.