Answer and explanation:
The speech's main points are:
I. The first step in buying a house is seeing a loan officer. II. The second step in buying a house is deciding what features you want. III. The third step in buying a house is looking at houses that are for sale. IV. The fourth step in buying a house is making an offer.
The points above are steps a person who wishes to buy a house may follow. A speech can have as its general purposes: to inform, to persuade/motivate, and to entertain. Notice that the points above do not aim at entertaining or persuading someone. They are merely informing what the steps are. Therefore, we can conclude the general and specific purposes of this speech are:
General Purpose: to inform.
Specific Purpose: to inform the audience about the step-by-step of buying a house.
A central idea is a declarative sentence focused on the audience. The central idea states the main topic to be developed throughout the speech. According to the points above, I believe we can say it is:
Central idea: Buying a house may sound as a complex process, but it can be broken down into four simple steps that will help you do it safely.
Answer:
The study of English vowel alternation has traditionally been done in an indirect manner, in conjunction with diachronic drawings of the English sound system or expositions of English morphophonemics. Rarely
Has it been presented with a significant degree of historical and cultural independence?
grammar. Despite this, vowel alternation is so common, so varied in pattern, and so potentially harmful in English.
Answer:
The book, published in 1678, is a Christian allegory that symbolizes the Christian's pilgrimage through life, and was written by Bunyan to outline his beliefs, as well as to critique the English government's persecution.
The last sentence used a formal writing style
<u>Changes that the author of Harrison Bergeron wants to see in the society:</u>
Harrison Bergeron is a protagonist of the short science fiction story written by Kurt Vonnegut Junior. The story envisions a society governed by the rules imposed by a lady dictator Diana Moon Glampers, the handicapper General, in charge of ensuring equality so that no one is better than anyone else.
She has devised inhuman means to enforce her set of desires using blinding spectacles, mental radio fitted in ears to hamper normal mental processes and other mechanical aids to serve her brutal purposes.
Bergeron is a boy who has been sent to prison for no valid crime of today’s world. When he tries to assert independence and tries to overthrow domination by perpetrators of brutality, he is shot dead along with a ballerina who tries to rebel with him.
He is the person who seeks change , speaks for his basic human rights , asserts and accepts his independence as an integral part of his survival as a human being. He is silenced forever by the insecure General
. The narrator tries to say that differences of form and intelligence make us human.
All are different. Those with higher intelligence like George, should not be handicapped but allowed to think and reason out. A society that is governed by the maxims of welfare and freedom to live can only succeed. Equality should not be imposed. Differences should be celebrated and allowed as being natural.