Willa Cather
Ralph Waldo Emerson
William Faulkner
Robert Frost
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Hope this helps have a good day.☺
Hope This Helps
https://byjus.com/govt-exams/direct-indirect-speech-rules/
Hey! We need the numbers to do so!
Answer:
The answer is: <u>All of the above.</u>
Explanation:
All the options mentioned, apply for why would you have to or like to learn about your audience first?
Take a teacher's example in the first day of school, with new students, normally that first day a teacher plans a lesson is to build a rapport and/or get to know the students a bit and viceversa. As time passes, she/he pays attention to students' needs in order to plan her/his lessons, in this way, she personalizes more and and keeps the studets focused and motivated, also in her every day lesson plans she has to anticipate problems or controversies that could arise during the lesson, so as to avoid it (depending on the students) or to come up with a suitable solution. And well, the same happens with an audience in general, it is important to take into consideration all of the above options, in order to have a successful and interesting speech.
Answer:
The war.
Explanation:
F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" revolves around the character of Jay Gatsby and his 'lost American dream'. Though narrated by another character, Nick Carraway, the novel focuses on Gatsby, his life, his desire for Daisy, the theme of status, greed, betrayal, lost love, etc.
In Chapter 3, Nick had gone to Gatsby's party after being invited. Though he knows his neighbor's name is Gatsby and that he would often throw parties, he hadn't actually met the man himself. While there at the party, he was conversing with Jordan at a table where there was a <em>"man of about [his] age"</em>. That man started a conversation with him, asking if he had been <em>"in the Third Division during the war"</em>, to which Nick replied that he <em>"was in the Ninth Machine-Gun Battalion."</em> The man then declared that he <em>"was in the Seventh Infantry until June nineteen-eighteen." </em>Shortly after this encounter, Nick discovered that the man was Gatsby himself after Gatsby remarked, <em>"I'm Gatsby."</em>