which statement from the speech provides reasoning for hiltons style of writing for his speeches? a. “if you…

which statement from the speech provides reasoning for hiltons style of writing for his speeches? a. “if you were outside my room... youd hear muttering and mumbling and outright declaration from the beginning to end.” b. “the bits ive always liked best are those that refer to john hilton who just comes to the microphone and talks. ” c. “my belief is that listeners hear speech, not in a sequence of words—one after the other—but in chunks...” d. “yes, of course, every words on paper even now—this—what im saying to you now—its all here.” part one read the sentence from the speech. “its in part, a mere matter of how you put the words down on the paper.” for which argument would the sentence be most relevant? a. speakers must rewrite their speeches several times on paper until it is perfectly written for the audience. b. speakers should make a long list of the things they wish to talk about during a speech and have it available during the speech. c. speakers should read their speeches slowly so people from all over the world will be able to understand what is being read aloud to them. d. speakers must prepare their speeches carefully to get the language to sound as natural as possible. part two which quote from the speech best supports the answer in part one? choose one answer. a. “... my way is to speak my sentences aloud as i write them.” b. “the first trick of the trade is that there arent any tricks.” c. “i like experiments. ill try anything once.” d. “... what listeners can spot more surely than anything else is any trace of falseness.”

which statement from the speech provides reasoning for hiltons style of writing for his speeches? a. “if you were outside my room... youd hear muttering and mumbling and outright declaration from the beginning to end.” b. “the bits ive always liked best are those that refer to john hilton who just comes to the microphone and talks. ” c. “my belief is that listeners hear speech, not in a sequence of words—one after the other—but in chunks...” d. “yes, of course, every words on paper even now—this—what im saying to you now—its all here.” part one read the sentence from the speech. “its in part, a mere matter of how you put the words down on the paper.” for which argument would the sentence be most relevant? a. speakers must rewrite their speeches several times on paper until it is perfectly written for the audience. b. speakers should make a long list of the things they wish to talk about during a speech and have it available during the speech. c. speakers should read their speeches slowly so people from all over the world will be able to understand what is being read aloud to them. d. speakers must prepare their speeches carefully to get the language to sound as natural as possible. part two which quote from the speech best supports the answer in part one? choose one answer. a. “... my way is to speak my sentences aloud as i write them.” b. “the first trick of the trade is that there arent any tricks.” c. “i like experiments. ill try anything once.” d. “... what listeners can spot more surely than anything else is any trace of falseness.”

Answer

Brief Explanations:

For the first question, option C provides reasoning about how listeners perceive speech in chunks, which relates to Hilton's writing style for speeches. For the second - part one question, the sentence about putting words on paper is relevant to the idea that speakers must prepare speeches carefully for natural - sounding language (option D). For part two, option A supports the idea in part one as speaking sentences aloud while writing helps in making the language sound natural.

Answer:

  1. C. "My belief is that listeners hear speech, not in a sequence of words—one after the other—but in chunks . . ."
  2. D. Speakers must prepare their speeches carefully to get the language to sound as natural as possible.
  3. A. ". . . my way is to speak my sentences aloud as I write them."