<u>Effective nonverbal strategies for a presentation are:</u>
1- Standing up straight. If you stand up straight it shows self-confidence and great attitude towards the audience. It tells the people that you are relaxed and you handle the situation easily.
2- Moving around. Using all the area provided is essential. You should avoid standing in one place just repeating your presentation. You must move around the space and get the best out of it to make sure everyone in the audience is paying attention to you.
3-Making eye contact. Making eye contact with people is the key to be effective when giving a presentation. By doing this you ensure that people are effectively listening and understanding the speech. This also shows that you know about you are talking about.
Answer: A. Bulgaria
Explanation:
What countries were on the west side of the Iron Curtain?
The Europan countries which were considered to be "behind the Iron Curtain" included: Poland, Estearn Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania and the Soviet Union. From North Korea to Cuba more countries were separated from the West in the same sense.
Imo
Allusion : don’t think you’re on a high pedestal like Robin Hood just because you took more than was offered. Robin Hood took from the rich and gave to the poor. The bowl holding the candy jar represents the rich, the peppermint representing the money/gold. You are the taker and the receiver.
Meaning: Don’t take more than offered and try to hold yourself at a high standard for doing such things.
The irony in the last stanza of the poem is:
“Tom is happy despite appalling working conditions, and he is not set free”.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The poem “The Chimney Cleaner”, by William Blake, is a poem that speaks of the dire conditions in which innocent children are made to clean the chimneys of huge and big houses.
In the poem, the last stanza tells about how Tom awakes from a pleasant dream and gets to work without feeling gloom or unhappy about the nature of the work. He rather is feeling happy and calm, even though he has not been set free from the working conditions.
This is the irony that reflects in the stanza; the innocent child’s happiness due to his pleasant dream but the crude reality that he yet lives in.