Answer: Where is the text though
1.) C. Even though all individuals experience the intellectual, emotional, social and physical changes of adolescence, everyone has a unique experience.
2.) A. Smith provides many different examples of the changes that all individuals will go through.
3.) A. The author speaks to teenagers to explain what’s happening in their bodies.
4.) C. The physical changes are minimal compared to the emotional changes.
(If the text is speaking out to adults/parents, then chose the answers below)
1.) D. 2.) D. 3.) C. 4.) C.
Her :) It's a woman talking, and there's only one of her
The characters, new situations
<span>True</span>
<span>
</span>
<span>Dialogue certainly is the best
method to use when analyzing a character because we can learn so much. Let’s say you are reading a story where the
main character reads a sign a person standing on a street corner is holding
that says, “Can you spare some change?”
After reading that sign, the main character walks up to that person and
yells in his face, “Why don’t you go get a job!?” What can be learned from this interaction? What can be deciphered from this is that the
main character is insensitive to the plights of others and apparently incapable
(or unwilling) to see things objectively and from a perspective other than his
own so much so that he jumps to conclusions and feels the person is just lazy
when, in fact, the person may have just recently lost a job, has bills that
need immediate paying, and/or is perhaps waiting for unemployment benefits to
become active while looking for a new job.
As you can see, thus, dialogue can be quite useful in analyzing a
character.</span>