Answer:
Your results will be speaking beyond your data
Explanation:
Your aim is to conduct a study that will examine sexual assault and proffer recommendations that will be used by administration to change the policy. This policy change will affect the whole campus and not just some members of campus fraternities. Hence if your idea was to examine sexual assault among campus fraternities, then this result would be ideal, but if you are going to use data for a small sub-section of a population to generalize for all other sub-population, then your result would be speaking beyond your data; meaning your data will be insufficient to come up with a result capable of leading to a policy change.
Answer:
B). A Conversation between the character and others.
Explanation:
As per the question, the most useful component in writing a character analysis would be 'a conversation between the character and others' as it will display his/her personality, behavior, and character traits.' <em><u>It will help in evaluating the attributes of the character, the conflicts they undergo, their role in the narrative and knowing what kind of individual the character is and reach a deduction</u></em>. Thus, <u>option B</u> is the correct answer as the description of the hometown, birthplace, or characters' list would not display his/her attributes, personality, or behavior.
The correct answer is A. The speaker's tone is troubled but intrigued.
We can tell the speaker is troubled because she says, "I did not know what to do." She says she shouldn't be seen with the girl and that she does not want to be walking with her. Therefore, she is troubled.
However, she is also intrigued, which is why she continues to walk with her. The speaker says, "on the other hand, the flattery of those humble, hopeful turnings was not lost on me." Ultimately, the speaker "could not resist" continuing along.
Therefore, the speaker's tone is troubled but also intrigued.
Modern monsters can hide within normal society; historical monsters lived outside of society.
Answer:
Opinion adverbs (or prepositional phrases) express a wide range of opinion: certainty, reality, sources, limitations and precision of the situation.