Advanced Composition' and Occasion-Sensitivity Further, people read for two reasons: entertainment or information. [ A writer who confuses, bores, or threatens the reader, "has lost that reader, usually for good." Earlier, Donald Murray's indispensable A Writer Teaches Writing (1968) focuses firmly on the target-audience. So writers, and now textbooks, embrace this pragmatism. Do the nation's writing classrooms, secondary and even collegiate, follow suit? Quite possibly not, which may suggest that advanced composition may often have a mandate to emphasize sensitivity to occasion as the keystone skill in real-world writing which it in fact is. My own foray into freelance writing in particular?77 articles in five years, but not without initial stumbles?taught me that real-world writing in general is varied, difficult, possible, necessary, satisfying. I now feel obligated to impart some of this perspective to my advanced writing students especially. ]
Identify possible solutions, option 2!!
Answer:
Question 1: The boy's journey begins because he loves the merchant's daughter and he wants to impress her.
Question 2: "When a person really desires something, all the universe conspires to help that person to realize his dream."
Question 3:
"'That's the way it always is,' said the old man. 'It's called the principle of favorability. When you play cards the first time, you are almost sure to win.'"
Explanation:
Birds is the simple subject