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Everyone kept telling me that a summer trip to Hawaii would be the highlight of my summer. It was the worst week of my life.

My big sister sobbed the whole way to the airport because she would miss her boyfriend. What an overreaction! The trip was six days long! He’d be there when she got back, but she was convinced she had a ticket to planet loneliness, not Maui. After listening to her cry for six hours, I wanted to send her somewhere else, too.

She started to cheer up when she saw the beaches, but that didn’t last long. Our twin little brothers, who often egged each other on to bad decisions, made possibly their worst choice ever: testing how many days they could spend at the beach without wearing any sunscreen. Answer: not even one full day before they were so lobster-red that we had to go to the emergency clinic! After that, the beach was off limits. It was totally ridiculous that I couldn’t go swimming just because they were too silly to wear sunscreen. I wasn’t going to make that mistake. But it didn’t matter. Mom decreed, “No beach for anybody.”

So lucky me, I spent my vacation watching Hawaiian TV and eating take-out food, rubbing lotion on my brothers’ blisters and watching my sister sniffle and text her boyfriend. What a vacation! Next time I visit Hawaii, I think I’ll go alone.

a-How does the narrator’s choice of words express her attitude toward her little brothers?

b-Words like “lobster-red” and “rubbing lotion on my brothers’ blisters” show how worried she is about them.
Words like “totally ridiculous” and “decreed” show how she and her brothers both felt that their mom spoiled the trip for them.

c-Phrases like “highlight of my summer” and “lucky me” indicate how grateful she is to have gone on the trip with her little brothers.

d-Phrases like “worst choice ever” and “too silly” convey her frustration.


Read this excerpt from the passage.

So lucky me, I spent my vacation watching Hawaiian TV and eating take-out food, . . .

Which word has a most similar meaning to eating in the excerpt?
devouring
consuming
munching
gorging

Which statement describes the language in the passage?

The language creates an academic tone.
The language shows the author's biases.
The language evokes joy.
The language is mostly in the third person

User Hithwen
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2 Answers

6 votes

Hello!


1) The most logical answer here is D

2) The answer is A consuming

3) The answer is B the language shows the author's biases


Hope it helps!

User Steven Mastandrea
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5.3k points
1 vote
1. d-Phrases like “worst choice ever” and “too silly” convey her frustration.
The narrator's frustration with her brothers, and the fact that she blames them for part of ruining her vacation is clear here.

2. consuming
Eating is a very bland word, it doesn't give much indication on how hungry she was or excited she was about the food. Consuming is equally as bland a word.

3.
The language shows the author's biases.
Word choice throughout this piece shows the extreme emotional bias the narrator has towards the vacation.
User Dimdm
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6.0k points