English, asked by Jasperr22, 3 months ago

Can you now evaluate the text you have just read? Try to identify if it follows the
guidelines on how to write a plot summary Write trunor false before the number
1. Does the story used present tense and in third person?
2. Is there a dialogue in the text?
3. The character's description is not brief
4. The dramatic scene and climatic scene are described
5. The synopsis is beyond 250 words.
6. Is the story in order?
7. Time and place are not given​

Answers

Answered by YuJin5698
8

Answer:

I think any blanket statement like "Introductions should be in present tense" are misleading at best. Tense is determined by the kind of statement you're making, not by where in the paper the verb occurs. True, certain parts of an article tend to favour certain types of statement, and so these tend to bias toward either past or present tense. However, no section can be said to be in one tense or another.

Abstracts are most definitely not just "present tense." Abstracts summarize the whole paper, so they will tend to replicate the general distribution of past and present verbs in the paper as a whole. You tend to see more present early, more past in the middle, and more present/future at the end. However, again, things are not so simple.

There is NO perfect, simple rule for determining what tense is appropriate. But there are general guidelines. If your statement is general or abstract (e.g. "Water freezes at 0C") the verb tends to be present; if your statement is specific or particular (e.g. "The water froze at 0C), the past tense is more appropriate. This is why you tend to find more past tense in the Methods and Results sections (these sections tend to report specific activities and observations), and why you find a mix of past and present in Discussions (which relate specific observations to more general inferences, speculation, or patterns across the field).

This is also why you can get a sentence that includes both tenses and still be correct, e.g. "We found a decrease in activity in the third trial, suggesting that temperature has different effects depending on the timing of measurement." The first part reports a specific observation; the second generalizes/extrapolates from that observation.

Explanation:

hope this helps you dear

Answered by shrutikhot
0

Answer:

 {3 {3 {233 {33 {333 { {3331313y3333 { {3 {23 { {?}^{?} }^{?} }^{?} }^{?} }^{2} }^{?} }^{?} }^{?} }^{?} }^{2} }^{?} }^{?}

Explanation:

23 { { = 1 =  {.3 \times y313113x \times  {3 {302}^{2} }^{?} }^{?} }^{?} }^{?}

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