The best answer for this question would be:
<span>3.memorize as much of the argument as possible.
It is good that in being a listener, you get to memorize and to analyze the argument given by the speaker. It is important to focus on one thing in order to understand what the content of the argument will be.</span>
<span>I am a teacher at a language school in Bath. I am married and I have two children. My brother is a doctor in the hospital in the city. he is 25 and he is (not) married. We live in bath but we are from London and every Christmas we go back to our parent's house to spend the holidays together. Last year we were in London for a week. the weather is (not) good but we are happy to be together. This year, my brother is (not going to) in London for Christmas because he is (going to) sightseeing in Paris with some friends. I would like to live in Paris, even if for a weekend!
I hope this helps!!</span>
Assuming this is in regard to "I Hear America Singing" by Walt Whitman, and "I, Too", by Langston Hughes.
The main point that Hughes makes in "I too (Sing, America)" is that the experience of many marginalized groups are not acknowledged in the national narrative. He directs this at Whitman's poem, pointing the many groups he does not mention singing. Hughes makes the point that American needs to celebrate all its people, and not just the ones who had a voice at the time.
Best answer is D) <span>America needs to celebrate its people.
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