Answer:Nonverbal Transitions
Explanation:Transitions during a speech delivery may make a speaker look more eloquent.
It also help to keep the audience focused and not falling asleep.
Non-verbal transitions include things like:
1) Pausing with your voice. This is very important to maintain and not let it get out of hands because if it is constant it may make you seem like you have lost the sequence of your thoughts This one overdone can seem like you have lost your train of thought. It is very effective thought if you have given your audience a thought provoking statement , that pause moment will make them reflect for that moment on what you just said.
2) Your body movement on the stage. This is also a non verbal transition
3) Using your fingers to count off points.
D. How does the lack of sleep hurt someone's health?
C is correct in this situation.
D by discussing how quickly satellite
The story of “How the Whale got his tiny Throat” by Rudyard Kipling was first published in St Nicholas Magazine, in December 1897. It was collected in Just So Stories, 1902, illustrated by the author and followed by the poem “When the cabin port-holes are dark and green.”
The story tells that once upon a time the Whale ate fishes of all types and sizes. At last there was only one left in the sea, a small astute fish that hid behind the whale’s ear and advised him to eat a shipwrecked mariner. The Whale swallowed the mariner and the raft he was sitting on.
But then the mariner was inside, he started to jumped around so much that the Whale got hiccups and asked him to come out. The mariner answered that he would not, unless he was taken to the shore of his British home, and hopped harder than ever. So the Whale took him to the beach and the mariner came out. But in the meantime the clever mariner had made his raft into a grating which he secured in the Whale’s throat with his suspenders. Forever after, the Whale could only eat the smallest of fishes.
the central idea of the passage is that:
Because of one man’s actions, whales never eat human beings.