<span>Tuesday was really quite a lovely day. It was a funny day. The weather was somewhat alright. We had a very nice picnic. We had an amazing time. The food was terrific!. We did various things and obviously we had an amzing time</span>
Answer:
Teachers are partly guilty for the way the children behave in schools. They don't have enough patience with the students and when the problem could be deeper than misbehaving like an issue happening at home, they tend to brush it off as attention seeking. Sometimes the roots of the problem is not always at the surface yet deep within someone. Although my answer is biased, I would have to also agree some students get bored too easily and aren't interested in the class/ subject enough to sit and pay attention. An easy solution would be making a class that gets students more involved or activities in which the students can participate with each other.
For the statement above w<span>hen reading a text passage, non-essential information is key to understanding the meaning of what you are reading about.That statement is false. Essential information is key to understanding the meaning of what you are reading.</span>
A speaker addresses a person for various reasons. For example, s/he may see that the listener is distracted and s/he may want the addressee to focus more on what s/he has to say. Moreover, it can happen in the middle of a speech, because what will follow is really important and s/he feels the need to underline it by asking for more attention from the listeners. Furthermore, the speaker may address a person because s/he may want to talk specifically to this person about something or in order to give him/her the stand.
So, from all the above, it could be concluded that the basic request of the speaker when s/he addresses a person is to grab the listener's attention.