Better Reading: Prose, Explanatory and PersuasiveScott, Foresman, 1945 - 596 Seiten |
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Seite 66
... answer . 4. Do the first two sentences of paragraph 4 involve a new argument or concrete one already made ? Explain your answer . Is the argument advanced here valid ? How is the thought of the next two sentences related to that already ...
... answer . 4. Do the first two sentences of paragraph 4 involve a new argument or concrete one already made ? Explain your answer . Is the argument advanced here valid ? How is the thought of the next two sentences related to that already ...
Seite 533
... answer particularly toward the problem of America's foreign policy . 3. How do the Beards and Brogan differ in their interpretation of American attitudes ? How do they agree ? Direct your answers particularly toward the problem of ...
... answer particularly toward the problem of America's foreign policy . 3. How do the Beards and Brogan differ in their interpretation of American attitudes ? How do they agree ? Direct your answers particularly toward the problem of ...
Seite 538
... answer different questions about each . In addition , unless a reader knows what a whole piece attempts , when he looks at details in it , he will be unable to figure out how such details are relevant or irrelevant . How does a reader ...
... answer different questions about each . In addition , unless a reader knows what a whole piece attempts , when he looks at details in it , he will be unable to figure out how such details are relevant or irrelevant . How does a reader ...
Inhalt
SPACE ARRANGEMENT The Battlefield of Waterloo | 7 |
COMPARISON AND CONTRAST True and False Humor | 13 |
ANALOGY The Stagecoach from Looking Backward Edward Bellamy | 19 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abraham Lincoln American animal answer argument audience Axis Powers become believe bourgeois Carl Sandburg common Communists course critic Crito culture DeMille democracy democratic Dover Beach economic effect essay Europe evil fact fascism father freedom frogs German Grapes of Wrath Hitler Hollywood human humor Huxley ideas interest John Steinbeck kind knowledge land learned less liberal arts colleges liberty Lincoln live Lord matter means ment method mind minor premise moral nation nature never paragraph peace person phrases piece political present problem Professor proletariat purpose Questions radio reader reason religion Russia scientific scientific method Scientism sense sentence social society Socrates speech Steinbeck story things thou thought tion true truth United unto virtue whole words writing