Friday, May 30, 2014

If the following six groups of sentences were in the proper order, they would be an easy-to-follow paragraph. Put the groups in order.Type the...

To complete sentence correlations, such as this, one needs
to examine the clues given to alert the reader as to what the proper order of the
sentences would be.


Given 1 has been labeled, the reader
knows that Billy has just entered onto the porch. Next, one must examine if any of the
other possibilities include information about a porch or leaving the
porch.


"A" offers the next possible step. Billy is still on
the porch. He has not left as of yet.


Next, a reader must
look for any more information about the porch or leaving the porch. Only "E" offers this
type of information. Billy is heading to the barn.


Billy's
next action should include what he is going to do at the barn. Only "B" and "D" offer
this type of information. To choose which comes next, one must examine the material
presented in both "B" and "D". In "B", Bill's actions are presented in the past tense,
we know that the action already happened, but the material offered in "D" states that he
is leaving the barn to go to breakfast. The only possible solution to follow next would
be "B".


"D" automatically follows given "F" is the close to
the paragraph (denoted by the name of the author at the
end).


Therefore, the proper set-up of the paragraph would
be:


c,a,e,b,d,f

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