True, because practicing your speech can make you confident when speaking in front of audience, and helps you memorize it.
Is there a graph or anything
I believe that this sentence means that Gatsby created this perfect image of Daisy which doesn't resemble reality anymore. He loved her for so many years that each time he thought about her, he added something new, more, better to his image of her, until she became perfection in his mind.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
because its a radio report people will be listening to it not viewing it so B and D are automatically wrong. C is upbeat music which is
"positive" and it gives the listener a good feeling; therefore, A is the only correct answer with sad gloomy music which will bring the listener's mood down.
The two main themes reflected in this excerpt are:
- the importance of family commitment
- the imortance of following one's dreams
- The longest part of the text consists of a description of how much Andrew and his parents are going to miss Robert as he leaves, and vice versa. Andrew even explains why it will be particularly difficult in this case: the two brothers have a special bond ("you and I ain’t like most brothers ... we’ve always been together"). The stage directions also indicate how moved the characters are about this departure ("with feeling"), and so does the punctuation, with exclamation marks and short sentences which usually express emotion ("Andy—believe that!").
- It is precisely this emphasis on the family bond that shows how much Robert's dream is important to him, because he is willing to suffer through separation to fulfill his desire to travel the world: "I hate to leave you and the old folks—but—I feel I’ve got to. There’s something calling me."