Sometimes this is true but not entirely so I would say false
The correct answer is C. Look for the article’s main idea
<span>The speaker in Robin Hood and the Scotchman is the narrator of the story. In this case, it is a third-person narrator. The narrator is not involved in the story. He is just reciting it. Based on a history of the era in which Robin Hood is believed to have lived, it is safe to assume that the narrator was a traveling musician who made a living traveling from royal court to royal court telling stories and singing ballads. </span>
Answer:
Problem and solution.
Chronological.
Explanation:
Paul B. Janeczko's <em>The Dark Game: True Spy Stories</em> contains real-life events of spy stories in the history of America. This book delves into the numerous instances of spying and diplomat wartime stories.
In the given passage, the writer uses the problem-solution text structure in narrating how Britain cut <em>"all five of the cables that carried communications through the channel"</em> in order to stop all communications between Europe and the United States. This chronological sequencing allows the perfect presentation of how this act is carried out, providing the information before the solution is thought out. The problem was the communication of Europe and the US and the solution was cutting the communication cable. And the information was given in a perfect sequence of identifying the problem and presenting the solution.