A big example of a procedural text is like a "how-to" guide, so the answer is A. it's meant to inform you how to do something. B is incorrect because procedural texts don't compare and contrast--like, giving you the how-to then giving you the how-NOT-to? in a procedural text, it's just giving you info. it doesn't usually include characters because it's a list of directions: set the oven to this temperature. remove after this many minutes. let cool. they don't put characters in as an illustration. procedural texts also shouldn't contain logical fallacies bc they're a set of directions, which are supposed to be factual and straightforward; there isn't really any misconceptions
Answer:
civil rights
Explanation:
people have the right to say what they feel
Wow goood job now give it to me
<span>1. facade </span>
<span>2. elude </span>
<span>3. premonition </span>
<span>4. credible </span>
<span>5. irony </span>
<span>6. incredulously </span>
<span>7. ironic... </span>
<span>honestly...did you read the book?</span>