Asked by A<3
How does printed text influence a reader’s understanding of a text?
It adds music and visuals to change the tone.
It allows a reader to picture the story.
It changes the experience of listening to a text.
It emphasizes the speaker’s voice.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Answer: "It allows a reader to picture the story."
Why: Printed text provides descriptive details, structure, and pacing that let readers form mental images and visualize scenes. The other choices are misleading: printed text doesn't add actual music or visuals; it doesn't directly change how something sounds when listened to (unless read aloud), and while it can suggest a speaker’s voice through word choice and punctuation, its primary effect is to enable visualization and close reading.
Why: Printed text provides descriptive details, structure, and pacing that let readers form mental images and visualize scenes. The other choices are misleading: printed text doesn't add actual music or visuals; it doesn't directly change how something sounds when listened to (unless read aloud), and while it can suggest a speaker’s voice through word choice and punctuation, its primary effect is to enable visualization and close reading.
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