Answer:
One day, two girls had a sleepover. They were having fun, but when it hit 1 in the morning, they heard screaming. "The screaming was coming from the attic!" the one girl called out, the other stood there in fear. The two girls, curious of the noise, headed out of the bedroom they were in and into the hallway. The two girls reached the attic, and they suddenly heard banging on the front door. The girls ran back to the bedroom and was traumatized from what had been happening. They stayed there until morning, hiding under the girls bed. Morning came and they told the girls parents. The one who was sleeping over had left, and now the parents explain to their daughter that it was a nightmare, but it wasn't. Two days later and some random guy was found sneaking into peoples homes and dragging in hostages with him, the girl was terrified, but shes safe.. For now.
Explanation:
I home this is good enough ;-; I'm not the best so-
Q: When analyzing a speech, what should be your first step?
<em>Hey there! Thanks for posting a question on Brainly! </em>
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<em>When analyzing a speech, you'd probably think "I should definitely determine who's speaking first".</em>
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<em>Well, let me tell you something... that's not the first thing you should do. Name of the speaker can wait, but first you'll have to identify their main argument. What is it that they're talking about? What evidence do they have to back themselves up? </em>
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<em>Once you identify the argument, the next steps would be to identify the speaker (A) and their personal biases (D). </em>
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<em>Hope this helped you out!</em>
<em>-Namira</em>
Yes this does happen it’s a cycle
First, I need to know which word is the underlined one?