Answer:
The correct answer is C - main subject.
Explanation:
In English, the topic of something is what the paper is centered around. For example, if you write an email and add a subject line, you are summarizing it very shortly. If I wrote a huge email explaining the benefits of healthcare, my subject would be "The Benefits of Healthcare." Therefore, C is your answer.
The answer cannot be A because your opinion is what is used to gain the topic of an essay. Your opinion is your stance on the topic and therefore is not a topic but rather your belief in the matter.
The answer cannot be B because the issue is why you would write the paper and does not mean that is what the paper will be about. For example, if my paper was misgraded, I would write an email about how upset I am. However, the topic would be to get the grade changed.
The answer is not D because a thesis statement is a broad opening into the evidence that supports the claim or topic of your essay.
I hope this helps.
Answer:
How much the audience already knows about an event (option C)
Explanation:
For this question, it seems like the point of view and the knowledge of the audience are both important, and they are,
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<em>but</em>, a newspaper should be unbiased/the point of view shouldn't really matter
so, one of the most important aspects is how much the audience already knows. This allows newspaper articles to give enough information that the newspaper is able to be read, but not so much redundancy to bore readers.
I think it's "scolded in a mild way" according to the context. Sorry if I'm wrong