my answer here would be A)
<h3>Some similarities between the speakers delivery and active listening are:</h3>
- Both the speakers delivery and active listening play a part in what is understood in the sentence that is being delivered through speech.
- Both speakers delivery and active listening are learning or have learned because of the speaker, (The speaker had to do research and stuff).
Good luck! Hope this helped! :D
From the short story "Mother Tongue"written by Amy Tan: Growing up, Amy struggled with the feeling of being in two language zones; on the one hand she used the simple English with her mother, who spoke English in an unclear way , according to others, and on the other hand she used the English she learned at school which was more sophisticated. There were times when she felt embarrassed by her mother's use of English, especially when her friends could not understand what she was saying. But her mother knew English very well because she could read sophisticated books in English. It was only her delivery of the language that was lacking. Later in life, Amy came to accept the positive aspects that she learned from growing up in an immigrant family, from her mother, and be grateful for the teachings of her two worlds.
The story of Anne frank and The Holocaust should be taught in middle school because of the history behind it all. Students from this generation need to be informed on what happened during the Holocaust because it is an important part of our history... the Holocaust truly shows how evil people can be. And it shows that there are survivors of bad events. The Holocaust was a vital yet horrid part of our history that must not be repeated. By talking about it with middle schoolers of this generation it add awareness to what happened and it allows us to make sure it doesn't happen again.
He was looked up more from the writers as an inspiration, it was the other way around. The inspiration to Poe 's darkest and most well known poem, written in 1845, was a real raven that was the beloved pet of the writer Charles Dickens who named it Grip.