Answer:
I was only able to list half of the items tried doing some more research but wasn't able to find the other items :[
but the items are bikes, food, clothes, children, and care.
Explanation:
A. I had pizza yesterday
B. Really? Wow! Do you have pizza often?
A. Yes, I do. I have pizza almost everyday. Did you have pizza yesterday.
B. No, I didn't. I had broccoli.
A. Are you having pizza tomorrow?
B. No, I am not. I am having a sandwich tomorrow.
I do not believe a comma is necessary in this sentence at all. In fact, if you were to insert a comma after the word grazed (as you maybe tempted to do) it could change the meaning of the sentence. If you meant the lions were oblivious of the presence of the gazelles, you would insert a comma after grazed. But if you meant the gazelles were oblivious of the presence of the lions, you would leave the comma out.
Answer:
How much the audience already knows about an event (option C)
Explanation:
For this question, it seems like the point of view and the knowledge of the audience are both important, and they are,
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<em>but</em>, a newspaper should be unbiased/the point of view shouldn't really matter
so, one of the most important aspects is how much the audience already knows. This allows newspaper articles to give enough information that the newspaper is able to be read, but not so much redundancy to bore readers.
For 1. Available
2. convincing
3. vain