I guess this also depends on what the "Advanced Reading Skills" lessons talks about, but don't think of it as "really hard"! Work on one word, one phrase, one sentence, and you'll start making progress. =)
In general, when translating, the first thing you'll have to do is to understand the paragraph, but you're right, this isn't that easy a paragraph to translate. You could use an English dictionary, or a bilingual dictionary (http://www.nciku.com<span>is good for English-Chinese) to help you. While you're doing this, try to pick out important words and translate them first, and see if you could understand what each sentence means. </span>
<span>Sometimes, words may have multiple meanings or be used as metaphors - for example, "amputated" means "having been cut off", but in your 2nd sentence, it means that the poet should not be condemned and criticised to the point where he is treated as having no value. </span>
<span>Finally, after you've translated the text, don't forget to read it to check if it makes sense in the language you're using - and if it makes for smooth reading!</span>
Monsters and mortals can't enter, unless allowed from someone on the inside
It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question, so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. The setting that would best <span>develop the theme in a play whose tragic hero's weakness is a lack of respect for authority would be a circus. Hope this helps.</span>
Answer:
Chunking
Explanation:
In Cognitive Psychology ( study of mental process like memory, attention, perception etc), Chunking is a method of memorizing in which an information is broken down and then grouped together. Chunking facilitates easy retrieval of information.
Vikranth could easily remember due to the grouped categorization of the information rather than individually. He breaks the 20 letters and groups it into seven. It is a memory mechanism to improve the perception level and to store the information easily.
I believe this is an example of either situational or dramatic irony,