Asked by h
Drag each item to indicate if it describes a formal style or an informal style.(2 points)Put responses in the correct input to answer the question. Select a response, navigate to the desired input and insert the response. Responses can be selected and inserted using the space bar, enter key, left mouse button or touchpad. Responses can also be moved by dragging with a mouse.Formal styleInformal style
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don’t see the specific items to drag — please paste them if you want me to sort them. Meanwhile, here are common descriptors you can use to decide which belong in each column:
Formal style:
- Uses third person (he/she/one) rather than I/you
- Avoids contractions (do not, cannot)
- Uses complex vocabulary and full sentences
- Objective, impersonal tone
- Uses professional greetings and closings (Dear Sir or Madam; Sincerely)
- Avoids slang, idioms, emojis
- Follows standard grammar and punctuation strictly
- Often used in academic, legal, or business writing
Informal style:
- Uses first- or second-person (I, we, you)
- Uses contractions (I’m, don’t)
- Uses simple, conversational vocabulary
- Friendly, personal tone
- Uses casual greetings/closings (Hi, Thanks; Cheers)
- May include slang, idioms, abbreviations, or emojis
- Shorter sentences, more conversational phrasing
- Often used in personal emails, texts, or casual conversation
If you paste the exact items from your exercise I’ll sort each one into Formal or Informal for you.
Formal style:
- Uses third person (he/she/one) rather than I/you
- Avoids contractions (do not, cannot)
- Uses complex vocabulary and full sentences
- Objective, impersonal tone
- Uses professional greetings and closings (Dear Sir or Madam; Sincerely)
- Avoids slang, idioms, emojis
- Follows standard grammar and punctuation strictly
- Often used in academic, legal, or business writing
Informal style:
- Uses first- or second-person (I, we, you)
- Uses contractions (I’m, don’t)
- Uses simple, conversational vocabulary
- Friendly, personal tone
- Uses casual greetings/closings (Hi, Thanks; Cheers)
- May include slang, idioms, abbreviations, or emojis
- Shorter sentences, more conversational phrasing
- Often used in personal emails, texts, or casual conversation
If you paste the exact items from your exercise I’ll sort each one into Formal or Informal for you.
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