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What is the conclusion of the passage
Ambivalence about the 'respective' rate of increase (or decrease?) in the statements of typeWhat is the tone of this line?Understand every words but whole passage doesn't make sensesudo up to root — I'm not sure if I understand the phrasing correctlyThe child, I am sure, was part of the appeal…What does it mean? difficult to understand :(How to interpret the two lines in the poem?Fill in the gap question of Chinese college entrance examQuestion about GRE sentence in supporting the passage?Issue in this reading comprehension passage - do subsequent statements counter the original statement?Are there any Android app which show a passage with a specific speed to read?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
A single short story can suggest a desired response from the reader. It is a difficult task, though, to create
a world within a single short story and then repeat this world again in other stories while maintaining a
consistent flow of ideas. Many authors prefer to use the same setting, indeed, often the same characters in
each story. Isabel Allende’s Diez Cuentos’ de Eva
Luna comes to mind. In these stories, Allende uses the small town of Agua Santa as the setting for the entire
collection.
Woman Hollering Creek is a collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros. Rather than using the same
characters or setting throughout the collection, Cisneros takes a different approach to relating her stories to
one another. Much of the burden, in fact, is placed on
the reader, for the characters change each time, as does the setting.
Furthermore, while the characters are
largely Mexican American immigrant women, each character presents a distinct style and literary voice. What
these works have in common is more intuitive; mood, circumstance, time, tone, and imagery all play a role in
creating the world in which the stories take place
What does these refers to? Are they Sandra's short stories or both of the writers ?
reading comprehension
add a comment |
A single short story can suggest a desired response from the reader. It is a difficult task, though, to create
a world within a single short story and then repeat this world again in other stories while maintaining a
consistent flow of ideas. Many authors prefer to use the same setting, indeed, often the same characters in
each story. Isabel Allende’s Diez Cuentos’ de Eva
Luna comes to mind. In these stories, Allende uses the small town of Agua Santa as the setting for the entire
collection.
Woman Hollering Creek is a collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros. Rather than using the same
characters or setting throughout the collection, Cisneros takes a different approach to relating her stories to
one another. Much of the burden, in fact, is placed on
the reader, for the characters change each time, as does the setting.
Furthermore, while the characters are
largely Mexican American immigrant women, each character presents a distinct style and literary voice. What
these works have in common is more intuitive; mood, circumstance, time, tone, and imagery all play a role in
creating the world in which the stories take place
What does these refers to? Are they Sandra's short stories or both of the writers ?
reading comprehension
2
I would suspect "these" refers to Cisneros' works because the sentence in which it appears is part of the same paragraph describing Cisneros' works. If the sentence were part of a new paragraph, I would suggest that it refers to both authors' works.
– Dog Lover
Feb 25 at 6:26
add a comment |
A single short story can suggest a desired response from the reader. It is a difficult task, though, to create
a world within a single short story and then repeat this world again in other stories while maintaining a
consistent flow of ideas. Many authors prefer to use the same setting, indeed, often the same characters in
each story. Isabel Allende’s Diez Cuentos’ de Eva
Luna comes to mind. In these stories, Allende uses the small town of Agua Santa as the setting for the entire
collection.
Woman Hollering Creek is a collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros. Rather than using the same
characters or setting throughout the collection, Cisneros takes a different approach to relating her stories to
one another. Much of the burden, in fact, is placed on
the reader, for the characters change each time, as does the setting.
Furthermore, while the characters are
largely Mexican American immigrant women, each character presents a distinct style and literary voice. What
these works have in common is more intuitive; mood, circumstance, time, tone, and imagery all play a role in
creating the world in which the stories take place
What does these refers to? Are they Sandra's short stories or both of the writers ?
reading comprehension
A single short story can suggest a desired response from the reader. It is a difficult task, though, to create
a world within a single short story and then repeat this world again in other stories while maintaining a
consistent flow of ideas. Many authors prefer to use the same setting, indeed, often the same characters in
each story. Isabel Allende’s Diez Cuentos’ de Eva
Luna comes to mind. In these stories, Allende uses the small town of Agua Santa as the setting for the entire
collection.
Woman Hollering Creek is a collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros. Rather than using the same
characters or setting throughout the collection, Cisneros takes a different approach to relating her stories to
one another. Much of the burden, in fact, is placed on
the reader, for the characters change each time, as does the setting.
Furthermore, while the characters are
largely Mexican American immigrant women, each character presents a distinct style and literary voice. What
these works have in common is more intuitive; mood, circumstance, time, tone, and imagery all play a role in
creating the world in which the stories take place
What does these refers to? Are they Sandra's short stories or both of the writers ?
reading comprehension
reading comprehension
edited Feb 26 at 1:44
Barmar
10k1529
10k1529
asked Feb 25 at 6:23
Dpseudo CodersDpseudo Coders
1
1
2
I would suspect "these" refers to Cisneros' works because the sentence in which it appears is part of the same paragraph describing Cisneros' works. If the sentence were part of a new paragraph, I would suggest that it refers to both authors' works.
– Dog Lover
Feb 25 at 6:26
add a comment |
2
I would suspect "these" refers to Cisneros' works because the sentence in which it appears is part of the same paragraph describing Cisneros' works. If the sentence were part of a new paragraph, I would suggest that it refers to both authors' works.
– Dog Lover
Feb 25 at 6:26
2
2
I would suspect "these" refers to Cisneros' works because the sentence in which it appears is part of the same paragraph describing Cisneros' works. If the sentence were part of a new paragraph, I would suggest that it refers to both authors' works.
– Dog Lover
Feb 25 at 6:26
I would suspect "these" refers to Cisneros' works because the sentence in which it appears is part of the same paragraph describing Cisneros' works. If the sentence were part of a new paragraph, I would suggest that it refers to both authors' works.
– Dog Lover
Feb 25 at 6:26
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Clearly refers to "Woman Hollering Creek", that is the collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros.
The reason for it is where it appears in the text. It comes after the statement that her works are different. And this sentence with the words "these works" describe their common characteristics.
add a comment |
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Clearly refers to "Woman Hollering Creek", that is the collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros.
The reason for it is where it appears in the text. It comes after the statement that her works are different. And this sentence with the words "these works" describe their common characteristics.
add a comment |
Clearly refers to "Woman Hollering Creek", that is the collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros.
The reason for it is where it appears in the text. It comes after the statement that her works are different. And this sentence with the words "these works" describe their common characteristics.
add a comment |
Clearly refers to "Woman Hollering Creek", that is the collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros.
The reason for it is where it appears in the text. It comes after the statement that her works are different. And this sentence with the words "these works" describe their common characteristics.
Clearly refers to "Woman Hollering Creek", that is the collection of short stories by Sandra Cisneros.
The reason for it is where it appears in the text. It comes after the statement that her works are different. And this sentence with the words "these works" describe their common characteristics.
answered Feb 25 at 6:39
ib11ib11
5781620
5781620
add a comment |
add a comment |
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I would suspect "these" refers to Cisneros' works because the sentence in which it appears is part of the same paragraph describing Cisneros' works. If the sentence were part of a new paragraph, I would suggest that it refers to both authors' works.
– Dog Lover
Feb 25 at 6:26