I have no idea what this says
The answers are: It does not allow listeners to interpret each character through his or her tone; and it does not allow listeners to review or reread what each character has said.
When hearing the characters voices out loud, and in the hypothetical case that it is a live audition and not a recording, one, as part of the audience, does not have, evidently, the possibility of reviewing or rereading what each character says. This may seem vane, but in reality, it can be very important when reading since sometimes the sense of what´s being read is so profound that, in order to capture in full, one needs to review a certain passage.
Also, hearing the characters has the disadvantage of making their voices concrete and specific according to whoever is speaking. This leaves out the possibility of filling the character´s voice with one´s own imagination, wit, and fantasy, which usually are very important characteristics of a fictional character (literature, in the end, is always a very subjective activity on the side of the reader).
Answer:
Cant anwser it
Explanation:
because we can't see the passage and therefore don't know how the feelings change.
Haiti and Cuba are two countries located on Hispaniola, the island labeled with the number 3 on the map above.
Option B. Haiti and Cuba.
Each kasike was ruled by a kasike (chief). Christopher Columbus renamed the island Espanola (Hispanola), which means "little Spain". On December 5, 1492, Columbus anchored off the northern coast of Haiti near present-day Capacity.
Hispaniola's political divisions are partly due to European struggles for control of the New World when France and Spain began competing for control of the island in the 17th century. They settled the dispute in 1697 by dividing the island into her two colonies.
Hispaniola, La Espanola, her second largest island in the Spanish West Indies, is located in the Greater Antilles in the Caribbean Sea. Politically, it is divided between the Haiti Republic (west) and the Dominican Republic (east).
Learn more about Hispaniola at
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