Asked by poppy
What conclusion can you draw about the tone of the text based on the sensory language?
(1 point)
Responses
The author is confused.
The author is confused.
The author is bored.
The author is bored.
The author is amused.
The author is amused.
The author is content.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I can’t tell from only the question — I need the actual passage to read its sensory details. Could you paste the text?
If you need to decide now, use this quick guide:
- Words about warmth, comfort, pleasant tastes/smells, soft sounds → author is content.
- Sensory details that are humorous, exaggerated, or playful → amused.
- Repetitive, bland sensory descriptions → bored.
- Sensory details that emphasize uncertainty, fragmented or mismatched impressions → confused.
If you share the passage I’ll pick the best option and explain why.
If you need to decide now, use this quick guide:
- Words about warmth, comfort, pleasant tastes/smells, soft sounds → author is content.
- Sensory details that are humorous, exaggerated, or playful → amused.
- Repetitive, bland sensory descriptions → bored.
- Sensory details that emphasize uncertainty, fragmented or mismatched impressions → confused.
If you share the passage I’ll pick the best option and explain why.
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