<p>More clearer is not correct usage - it should be clearer. I would recommend you go over the rules for using “more,” “much,” and the endings “-er” and “-est” if you’re having trouble with this.</p>
<p>also (1)This summer I felt as if I were listening in on the Middle Ages with a hidden microphone. (2) No, there were no microphones in those days.</p>
<p>The best way to describe the relationship of sentence 2 to sentence 1 is that sentence 2</p>
<p>(A) anticipates a reader’s possible response to sentence 1
(B) provides historical background for sentence 1
(C) repeats the idea presented in sentence 1
(D) introduces a contrasting view of sentence 1
(E) corrects an inaccuracy stated in sentence 1</p>
<p>(B) and (C) are kind of dumb answer choices. (D) and (E) aren’t correct, mostly due to the fact that sentence 2 is a little sarcastic. (A) is the best response.</p>
<p>The answer is A. The answer is obviously A. The answer couldn’t be anything other than A!</p>
<p>If someone said to me, “If I were listening in on the Middle Ages with a microphone . . .”, my first response would be: “How could you do that? They didn’t have microphones in the Middle Ages!” Sentence (2) anticipates this response.</p>
<p>gee rather rude on that last comment huh? (quote)Quote:
can someone help me? </p>
<p>No, I don’t think so.</p>
<p>The answer is A. The answer is obviously A. The answer couldn’t be anything other than A!</p>
<p>If someone said to me, “If I were listening in on the Middle Ages with a microphone . . .”, my first response would be: “How could you do that? They didn’t have microphones in the Middle Ages!” Sentence (2) anticipates this response.(/quote)</p>