Why are Pre-Reading Activities Important?
Pre-reading activities help students prepare for the reading activity by activating the relevant schemata, and motivating them to read. Pre-reading activities can also help learners anticipate the topic, vocabulary and possibly important grammar structures in the texts.
The main idea is found by looking at the general idea of the text you are reading, what is it about? What does it mention?
Answer:
A
Explanation:
C usually doesn't help with anything aside from implying how fast the plot is progressing, or a sudden break/ change from the initial storyline, that kind of thing.
B. The surface level topic is always very apparent, it's the underlying topic that requires knowing what's the tone of the text and some other factors to know.
D. The quantity of adjectives used usually doesn't matter as much as the quality of the adjectives used.
So A is the answer I deducted.
Answer:
Belle is described as a "fair young girl in a mourning dress... in whose eyes there were tears." Belle tells Scrooge that he has too much fear of the world and that everything important to him has receded in the face of his desire to be beyond the world's reproach. Belle claims that Scrooge's noble aspirations have been left behind and that he is only interested in gaining.
Explanation: