Answer:
Arranged from the most reliable to least reliable
1: An article in a business journal about the rise of pet-friendly businesses
2: An article by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) about hygiene in pet-friendly businesses
3: A website owned by a business that sells pet products
4: A personal blog detailing an experience at a pet-friendly café
Explanation:
1: An article in a business journal has thoroughly researched content written by experts in that specific business.
2: An article by Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is also reliable and will provide useful information about possible diseases and their precautions/treatments.
3: A website owned by a business that sells pet products, although not much reliable, will provide insights into different products. It is less reliable as business websites usually exaggeratedly portray many things.
4: A personal blog could be least helpful as they are mostly written from SEO (Search Engine Optimization) point of view to increase web-traffic, and may contain limited help in a specific case.
Answer is A hope this helps
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. ]
The sentence that does not contain any errors in comma usage is option C. Mick introduced me to his dog, a golden retriever. We used a comma after the word dog because the phrase "a golden retriever" serves as an additional information to the sentence.