What are explicit meanings?(1 point)

Responses

information in a text that support an idea or analysis
information in a text that support an idea or analysis

conclusions readers form from evidence and reasoning
conclusions readers form from evidence and reasoning

ideas or details that are stated directly in a text
ideas or details that are stated directly in a text

claims that are made during an analysis of a text

9 answers

The explicit meanings refer to ideas or details that are stated directly in a text.

What is textual evidence?(1 point)
Responses

details or clues in a story that foreshadow its ending
details or clues in a story that foreshadow its ending

claims that are made during an analysis of a text
claims that are made during an analysis of a text

conclusions readers form from evidence and reasoning
conclusions readers form from evidence and reasoning

information in a text that support an idea or analysis

Textual evidence refers to information in a text that supports an idea or analysis.

What is an inference?(1 point)
Responses

an analysis of ideas or details included in a text
an analysis of ideas or details included in a text

an idea or detail that is stated directly in a text
an idea or detail that is stated directly in a text

information in a text that supports an idea or analysis
information in a text that supports an idea or analysis

a conclusion formed from evidence and reasoning

An inference is a conclusion formed from evidence and reasoning.

Use the excerpt from “Big Water” to answer the question.

Today I feel only dread. I’m sweating again—my cheeks are flushed. I thought I would feel relieved to be back in civilization, to be rescued from certain death, but instead, seeing the town and the men rushing about on the dock, the boats and sails and horse-drawn wagons, I’m struck again by what we have just endured. I want to find Daniel, see his face, know that he remembers too, but he’s tunneled down beneath the blankets like a mole.
What detail from the text best supports the inference that Daniel is having feelings similar to the narrator’s?

(1 point)
Responses

Daniel has tunneled down to hide under the blankets.
Daniel has tunneled down to hide under the blankets.

The narrator expected to feel relieved but does not.
The narrator expected to feel relieved but does not.

They have both recently escaped from certain death.
They have both recently escaped from certain death.

The narrator wants to share a moment with Daniel.

The detail from the text that best supports the inference that Daniel is having feelings similar to the narrator’s is Daniel has tunneled down to hide under the blankets. This suggests that he may be overwhelmed by emotions, similar to the narrator's feelings of dread and distress.

Big Water
by Andrea Curtis

Henry and Eva fold the sails and get out oars. We are bumping up against the stone-filled cribs of a large, wide dock within minutes.

I watch the men on the docks with their untamed beards and callused hands, their frayed wool pants and faded hats. They are young and old and move about like a kind of machine, few of them speaking but working together without need of words. Moving cargo, hauling wood, cleaning boats. Picking up, passing, carrying. I hear one call to another in French, someone respond in English. A thick-necked tabby cat sneaks down the dock, sniffing here and there. It rubs its long orange-and-white striped side along one burly man’s boot. The man reaches down and scratches the old cat behind its ear, and it leans in toward him.

These men pay us little attention until we are banging up against the high dock. Their faces flicker with confusion, then disbelief as Daniel calls out, “We were on the Asia. The boat is sunk. We are survivors! Help us.” He holds up the pillowcase with S.S. Asia stenciled along the hem.

Excerpt from Big Water by Andrea Curtis. Printed with permission by Orca Book Publishers

Question
Use the excerpt from “Big Water” to answer the question.

What details from the text explicitly support the inference that the men on the dock work together frequently? Select the two correct answers.

(1 point)
Responses

They work without needing to speak.
They work without needing to speak.

They speak different languages.
They speak different languages.

They have untamed beards.
They have untamed beards.

The move like a machine.
The move like a machine.

They have callused hands.

The details from the text that explicitly support the inference that the men on the dock work together frequently are:

  1. They work without needing to speak.
  2. They move like a machine.

These details suggest a familiarity and efficiency in their teamwork.

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