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KonstantinChe [14]
3 years ago
12

Choose the verb(s) in this sentence.

English
2 answers:
Tomtit [17]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Reads, Speaks

Explanation:

A verb is an action in a sentence. Verbs can be expressed in different tenses (past, present, and future), depending on when the action is being performed. The verbs in your sentence are in the present tense because the banker is doing it now, not in the past or the future.

ale4655 [162]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

the verbs are reads and speaks

Explanation:

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While hate speech can often be dismissed as bigoted ranting or merely painful words, it could also serve as an important warning sign for a much more severe consequence: genocide. Increasingly virulent hate speech is often a precursor to mass violence. World Policy Institute fellow Susan Benesch, along with Dr. Francis Deng, the United Nations Special Advisor on the Prevention of Genocide (OSAPG), is attempting to find methods for preventing or limiting such violence,  by examining the effects of speech upon a population. Initiated in February 2010, Benesch’s project,  is funded by the MacArthur Foundation, the US Institute of Peace and the Fetzer Institute. It was inspired by the high levels of inflammatory speech preceding Rwandan genocide and the Bosnian war of the  mid-1990s. Since then, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda  has recognized the relationship between hate speech and genocide by trying the world’s first “incitement to genocide” cases, convicting radio broadcasters, a newspaper editor, and even a pop star for the crime. Following suit, the International Criminal Court has indicted a Kenyan radio host for broadcasts preceding the post-election violence of 2007-2008 in Kenya

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Within context, speech can take on new meaning. “Are there particular aspects of the context that make a particular speech act more dangerous?” Benesch asked her audience on Thursday. “In other words, [are there factors] more likely to catalyze a particular form of incitement, like incitement to genocide, than other factors?”

Speech can also become less harmful if its sources are not credible, discredited or unseen by the population.

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