When should the reader first stop to ask a question when reading "Morris Remembers the Steamship" in the "Ellis Island Oral History Project" excerpt, and which question should the reader ask to understand Morris’s voyage? A reader should stop after the first sentence and ask, "What is the Rotterdam?" A reader should stop after the second sentence and ask, "Had the speaker ever been on a ship before?" A reader should stop after the second sentence and ask, "How did the speaker feel about being on the ship?" A reader should stop after the third sentence and ask, "Is the speaker traveling alone?"
Answers
Answered by
2
Answer:
When should the reader first stop to ask a question when reading "Morris Remembers the Steamship" in the "Ellis Island Oral History Project" excerpt, and which question should the reader ask to understand Morris’s voyage? A reader should stop after the first sentence and ask, "What is the Rotterdam?" A reader should stop after the second sentence and ask, "Had the speaker ever been on a ship before?" A reader should stop after the second sentence and ask, "How did the speaker feel about being on the ship?" A reader should stop after the third sentence and ask, "Is the speaker traveling alone?"
Answered by
2
Answer: A reader should stop after the first sentence and ask, "What is the Rotterdam?"
Similar questions
Political Science,
4 months ago
India Languages,
4 months ago
Math,
4 months ago
Math,
8 months ago
English,
8 months ago
Math,
1 year ago