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Playlist AP® English Language and Composition: Passage Drills 40 videos
Wishing upon a star may help you pass your AP English Language and Composition test, but answering this question would be a safer bet.
AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 7. What is the principal rhetorical function of paragraphs one to three?
AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill 1, Problem 8. The quotation marks in the third paragraph chiefly serve to what?
AP English Language and Composition 8.1 Passage Drill 197 Views
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Description:
AP English Language and Composition 8.1 Passage Drill. What best describes the authorial tone in this passage?
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak And here's your shmoop too sure
- 00:06
brought to you by uncle sam We like our uncle
- 00:08
just fine but he seems like a bit of a
- 00:10
slacker next to good old sam here All right well
- 00:13
let's check out the following passage settling get country and
Full Transcript
- 00:17
well here we go Patching haven't looked on and on
- 00:20
weed Bryan hayes mecca melanie a neighbour in american society
- 00:26
this goes on and on doesn't aren't can't philosopher candor
- 00:31
here's our question what best describes the authority tone in
- 00:34
this passage and here the potential answers are full of
- 00:38
grease mother resentful is a pretty strong word that suggests
- 00:42
feelings of bitterness and anger based on a perception of
- 00:45
being treated unfairly Well at no point in the reading
- 00:48
does that tone suggest the author feels bitter or angry
- 00:51
She just seems a bit annoyed both since her feelings
- 00:54
or less intense than bitterness and anger answer is clearly
- 00:57
not what we're looking for and since we've established that
- 00:59
the authors tone isn't very angry we can knock out
- 01:02
any other answers that contain that word as well Audio's
- 01:05
seat how about b Is our author critical but hopeful
- 01:09
Well when someone is critical about something they tend to
- 01:12
express their disapproval In her first sense the author suggests
- 01:15
that when a european visits america a siri's of tyranny
- 01:18
is set in action against them to say that anyone
- 01:21
who visits america faces tyranny or oppressiveness sounds pretty critical
- 01:24
unless they happen to take a detour of the d
- 01:27
m v voting in line forty She uses such words
- 01:29
as annoying irk sameness and stubborn those sound like judgmental
- 01:33
words to us not to mention they kind of staying
- 01:36
and let's not forget the second part of the answer
- 01:38
hopeful As we read the last paragraph the author suggests
- 01:41
that if american can get over itself and the rest
- 01:44
of europe might be willing to welcome one of the
- 01:46
finest countries on earth into european fellowship good american this
- 01:51
might not sound all that great but to a british
- 01:53
travel author there's nothing a young and fresh faced country
- 01:57
like ours could hope for more That makes me the
- 01:59
correct answer and who knows Maybe the author just needs
- 02:02
to find some common ground with america May we suggest 00:02:04.96 --> [endTime] a board game night
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