You should never avoid your listiners they might have something important to say that could go along with he or shes evidence you don't know what your talking about
It can affect your life in the business world in a lot of ways. If you have good rhetoric, you're more likely to be hired and you'll probably perform better since you'd be more persuasive and eloquent.
If you have poor rhetoric, you're probably less likely to be hired because you don't know the vocabulary or you're not very persuasive. You also might perform poorly (for instance if you had to sell something and you didn't have good speech)
D - Hansel and Gretel must find a way to escape from the witch.
While answer A shows a conflict, their major conflict is with the witch. B is incorrect and they don't have any decision to make whether or not to stay and C is never mentioned in the text.
Hello,
I think you are talking about Sugar Changed the World.
"Nina was always a mysterious figure in the family: beautiful as a movie star, cosmopolitan and elegant, with wide Slavic cheeks. She spoke only Russian, though she lived much of her adult life in Tel Aviv. There were rumors that she came from nobility and that she had once been very rich. She and Avram were thought of as a glamorous couple—he the charming man with his head in the clouds (in Yiddish the word for that kind of person is luftmensh, "air man''), she the mysterious beauty who had given up everything to be with him."
Answer:
In this passage, the author presents background information about Nina by providing us personal information about her and historical facts about her life; he also describes the mystery, controversial and weirds topics that have been taking place during her life.
His 2nd porpuse was to show how Nina was able to mislead people: We can see how she was able to trick people, she was a liar: she spoke Russian, but she knew speak Hebrew.
Next time, please, add the passage. :) Thanks!
The two mistakes in the sentence are "trophys" and "metals".
The plural form of "trophy" is "trophies" not "trophys" because the plural form of nouns that end in "-y" is usually "-ies".
In the sentence, "metals" is not wrongly spelled but it does not make much sense. It is quite strange to say to someone not to touch trophies and metals, the two objects do not seem to have any type of relationship. If you consider that the person is talking about awards and prizes, instead of metals, he or she is referring to "medals".
Even though there are two more mistakes, I don't think the question aims at those. Just remember that the sentence should start with a capital letter and finish with a full stop.
So the sentence would read: Do not touch trophies or medals.