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English, 29.08.2019 10:00 182075

In argumentative writing, the writer should organize the information so that which section comes first? a: evidence b: reason c: rebuttal d: thesis

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English, 21.06.2019 23:30, cjjohnson1221
Read the excerpt from elie wiesel’s all rivers run to the sea. why were those trains allowed to roll unhindered into poland? why were the tracks leading to birkenau never bombed? i have put these questions to american presidents and generals and to high-ranking soviet officers. since moscow and washington knew what the killers were doing in the death camps, why was nothing done at least to slow down their “production”? that not a single allied military aircraft ever tried to destroy the rail lines converging on auschwitz remains an outrageous enigma to me. birkenau was “processing” ten thousand jews a day. stopping a single convoy for a single night—or even for just a few hours—would have prolonged so many lives. based on the paragraph, the author would most likely agree that it is best to avoid confrontation at all costs. people need to be proactive when they witness an injustice. countries should remain neutral to keep alliances strong. moscow and washington are to be blamed for the holocaust.
Answers: 2
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English, 22.06.2019 05:30, tressasill
Ihave no idea what the explanation is.
Answers: 1
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English, 22.06.2019 08:30, devinmoore4664
Read the excerpt from "mother tongue." those tests were constructed around items like fill-in-the-blank sentence completion, such as “even though tom was mary thought he was ” and the correct answer always seemed to be the most bland combinations of thoughts, for example, “even though tom was foolish, mary thought he was ridiculous.” well, according to my mother, there were very few limitations as to what tom could have been and what mary might have thought of him. so i never did well on tests like that. how does tan build a central idea of her story in the excerpt? tan discusses the types of questions on achievement tests to support the idea that the tests limit students’ ability to write well. tan explains a question on a language achievement test to support the idea that the tests should include more interesting content. tan gives an example of her experience with achievement tests to support the idea that they are not always accurate measures of language ability. tan considers how her mother might answer a question on a test to support the idea that nonstandard english limits a person’s ability to communicate.
Answers: 2
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English, 22.06.2019 14:10, rk193140
What aspect of life does the author best suggest in paragraph 7 of things fall apart. how a happy family life is achieved how a family divides its chores how a family maintains its traditions how a large family shares its resources
Answers: 1
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In argumentative writing, the writer should organize the information so that which section comes fir...

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