1. Question from a listener:
What do you have planned for the party of your best friend?
2. Content paraphrase from listener:
So I understand that there will be a dinner at a restaurant with all of her close friends that you have been planning.
3. Feelings paraphrase from listener:
You must be excited because basically she would believe that everyone forgot her birthday and it would be actually a surprise for her.
4. Combination paraphrase from listener:
So I understand that there will be a dinner at a restaurant with all of your best friend's close friends that you have been planning. You must be excited because basically she would believe that everyone forgot her birthday and she is just going to have dinner and it would be actually a surprise for her.
The answer is a, prediction
Answer:
rupt - break - as in corrupt
Voc - call, to name - as in vocabulary
tion - changes verb to noun - as in information
script - writing - as in scripture
sequ - to follow - as in sequence
dis - negative, apart - as in disconnect
nat - to born, birth
Explanation:
Give
D. How are the sentences written—simple or complex, short and choppy, or long and hard to read?
Writing has structure, and this structure can be understood to be how, for instance, an entire paper is organized such as how ideas are placed within the paper—which ideas appear at the beginning and which ideas appear at the end. The structure also exists on the level of individual sentences such as how words are placed within the sentence, how sentences are presented—are they simple, compound, complex, compound-complex, etc. Thus, when analyzing structure, a good question to ask is “How are the sentences written?”