Answer:
Predicting requires the reader to do two things: 1) use clues the author provides in the text, and 2) use what he/she knows from personal experience or knowledge (schema). When readers combine these two things, they can make relevant, logical predictions.
An author from the age of reason would write a book where the main topic would be greed, but he would do it in a very different manner from the modernist author, although the topic is relatively the same. This first author would write about greed, but only to present its bad sides, to say how and why greed is bad. Whereas a modernist author would talk about the same topic with the view to creating a society that knows no such sin, that is completely cleansed from it.
it is asking if you act how you really feel around everyone listed. most likely, societal forces cause you to behave differently unless you are completely alone so all probably apply
Back when African Americans were first freed, owning land was the sure sign to them that they were free. But, many whites did not want to sell them land because they had just been property and they felt that they were too low to own anything.