Asked by BTS ARMY
Use the sentence to answer the question.
Many nice plants filled the hotel lobby.
Which word could replace nice to add more precision to the sentence?
(1 point)
Responses
bamboo
green
green
cool
cool
many
Many nice plants filled the hotel lobby.
Which word could replace nice to add more precision to the sentence?
(1 point)
Responses
bamboo
green
green
cool
cool
many
Answers
Answered by
BTS ARMY
Use the sentence to answer the question.
Some animals are omnivores, which means that their food comes from plant and animal sources.
Which word from the sentence is an example of domain-specific language?
(1 point)
Responses
animals
animals
food
food
sources
sources
omnivores
Some animals are omnivores, which means that their food comes from plant and animal sources.
Which word from the sentence is an example of domain-specific language?
(1 point)
Responses
animals
animals
food
food
sources
sources
omnivores
Answered by
BTS ARMY
Use the paragraph to answer the question.
Dear Hiring Manager,
I am applying for the position of summer cashier. I learned about this job from your advertisement in the school paper. I have experience working as a volunteer cashier at my club booth at the 4-H fair. I am friendly, a hard worker, and awesome at customer service. Thank you for your time and attention. I have attached my resume to this email.
Sincerely,
Anthony Jones
Which word should the writer change to maintain the formal tone of the email?
(1 point)
Responses
sincerely
sincerely
awesome
awesome
attention
attention
friendly
Dear Hiring Manager,
I am applying for the position of summer cashier. I learned about this job from your advertisement in the school paper. I have experience working as a volunteer cashier at my club booth at the 4-H fair. I am friendly, a hard worker, and awesome at customer service. Thank you for your time and attention. I have attached my resume to this email.
Sincerely,
Anthony Jones
Which word should the writer change to maintain the formal tone of the email?
(1 point)
Responses
sincerely
sincerely
awesome
awesome
attention
attention
friendly
Answered by
BTS ARMY
Use the sentence to answer the question.
The mechanic said the car needed some brake things replaced.
Which words can replace the imprecise phrase some brake things with domain-specific language?
(1 point)
Responses
things that stop the car
things that stop the car
some parts that wore out
some parts that wore out
some important parts
some important parts
the wheel cylinders
The mechanic said the car needed some brake things replaced.
Which words can replace the imprecise phrase some brake things with domain-specific language?
(1 point)
Responses
things that stop the car
things that stop the car
some parts that wore out
some parts that wore out
some important parts
some important parts
the wheel cylinders
Answered by
BTS ARMY
In which situation is it appropriate to write using informal language?(1 point)
Responses
a scientific research article
a scientific research article
a cover letter for a job application
a cover letter for a job application
a legal document to present in court
a legal document to present in court
a postcard to a friend
a postcard to a friend
Responses
a scientific research article
a scientific research article
a cover letter for a job application
a cover letter for a job application
a legal document to present in court
a legal document to present in court
a postcard to a friend
a postcard to a friend
Answered by
BTS ARMY
the first question is bamboo not green
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The word "green" could replace "nice" to add more precision to the sentence.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The word "omnivores" is an example of domain-specific language.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The writer should change the word "awesome" to maintain the formal tone of the email.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The phrase "the wheel cylinders" can replace the imprecise phrase "some brake things" with domain-specific language.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
It is appropriate to write using informal language in "a postcard to a friend."
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
You are correct. The word "bamboo" could certainly replace "nice" to provide more precision, especially if the context relates specifically to plants. Thank you for pointing that out! If there's anything else you'd like to clarify or ask, feel free!
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