This question is missing the options. I've found the complete question online. The options are as follows:
[...] Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson have been together for 23 years, as have Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick. Denzel and Pauletta Washington have been married for 28 years, Billy and Janice Crystal for 41 years, and Bill and Camille Cosby for 47 years.
A. brief examples
B. synthetic examples
C. repetitive examples
D. enumerated examples
E. informative examples
Answer:
The kind of supporting materials being used in the excerpt is:
A. brief examples
.
Explanation:
<u>The purpose of using brief examples is to simply further illustrate or demonstrate something to the audience that they may not know, that is not so obvious to them. That is precisely what we have in the excerpt we are analyzing here. The speaker merely wishes to show his/her audience that there are several couples in Hollywood who have been married for quite some time. There is no need to used, for instance, an extended example here. What has been said so far is not so complex as to demand a lengthy example</u>. Notice that the speaker is not necessarily enumerating the couples, nor is he/she providing two much information about them. Their names and how long they've been married are briefly stated, which is enough for the purpose of illustrating the affirmation that "Not all Hollywood marriages are doomed to quick failure."
Answer:
1: Disintegrating
"Garry's memory of his friend is slowly disintegrating with time."
2: Vulnerable
"The dog was vulnerable, and had nothing else to do except accept the person's presence, and let them rescue him."
3: Permissible
"It isn't permissible to accept such conditions for a house."
I hope I helped
Answer:
Lord Capulet allows Romeo to remain at the ball:
C. because he does not want to end the festivities
Explanation:
Lord Capulet and Romeo belong to rival families. One night, Capulet is throwing a ball, and Romeo, along with a friend, decides to attend even though he is not welcome. Tybalt Capulet is angry to see Romeo there, and wants to give him a lesson. Lord Capulet, however, does not wish his party to end on account of a fight. He argues with Tybalt, saying Romeo certainly did not attend with malicious intent. He knows a fight would ruin everyone's night and, even worse, might even get him arrested.