English, asked by sumancb386, 3 days ago

what are the different types of reading?how are reading, listening, writing, and speaking interlinked​

Answers

Answered by Nouset
0

Answer:

yes it's linked as

Explanation:

if you will listed you will read . if you read you will speak . if you speak you write..

pls make me brailist

Answered by QuestionLover
1

4 Different Types Of Reading Techniques

Skimming

Skimming, sometimes referred to as gist reading, means going through the text to grasp the main idea. Here, the reader doesn’t pronounce each and every word of the text but focuses their attention on the main theme or the core of the text. Examples of skimming are reading magazines or newspapers and searching for a name in a telephone directory.

Scanning

Here, the reader quickly scuttles across sentences to get to a particular piece of information. Scanning involves the technique of rejecting or ignoring irrelevant information from the text to locate a specific piece of information.

Intensive Reading

Intensive reading is far more time-consuming than skimming and scanning as it needs the reader’s attention to detail. It involves close reading that aims at the accuracy of comprehension. Here, the reader has to understand the meaning of each and every word.

Extensive reading

Extensive reading lays more emphasis on fluency and less on accuracy. It usually involves reading for pleasure and is more of an out-of-classroom activity. It is highly unlikely for readers to take up the extensive reading of text they do not like.

How are reading, listening, writing, and speaking interlinked​ ?

Two separate kinds of activity are involved here, both involving thought. Reading and listening are receptive, writing and speaking are trans-missive. Both are ‘active’ in the sense of requiring effort on the part of the individual.

Reading and listening involve understanding and interpreting the intent of the person writing or speaking. This may require little or no effort, if the writer or speaker is competent and is communicating in one’s own native tongue, or may demand extreme effort is the writer or speaker is not capable, or is speaking in a foreign language.  

Writing and speaking require a fundamental decision on the part of the writer or speaker: who is the audience and what does one want them to ‘do’ (take action such as vote, leave a burning building, accept a marriage proposal—the list of intended responses from an ‘audience’ is almost infinite.  

The basic criterion here, in either set of activities, is the quality of thinking. The medium is also worth considering: a hand-written letter is more personal and acceptable than email spam; whispering into the ear of one’s beloved is more intimate than broadcasting over a loud hailer.

Have a Great day Ahead :)

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