Lang quiz
Which of the following best describes the images in the last sentence of the passage (lines 32-43)?
A series of increasingly detailed and implausible events
The author develops the passage primarily through
accumulation of detail
Which of the following is true of the comparisons in lines 11-14 ("they say ... Philadelphia")
They clarify the distinctions between the language of climatologists and that of weather casters.
The author is best described as
a curious individual who seeks out diverse information from a variety of sources
The first sentence of the passage (lines 1-14) employs all of the following to convey the power and variety of tornadoes EXCEPT
abstract generalization
The second paragraph of the passage relies especially on the use of
colorful anecdotes
The phrase "as bald as if a cyclonic wind had taken his scalp" (lines 18-19) does all of the following EXCEPT
express concern about the condition of the grandfather
In context, the image of being up under Old Nell's skirt (lines 23-24) is meant to suggest
familiarity
The passage ends on a note of
lighthearted irony
When the passage moves from the first paragraph to the second, it also moves from
overview to illustration
The statement "although ... survived" (lines 7-8) is an admission that
some tornadoes are so powerful that scientists cannot quantify them precisely
Compared with that of the rest of the passage, the diction of lines 1-8 ("Climatologists ... survived") is
technical and specialized
The passage implies that unlike hurricanes, tornadoes are not given human names because
they last too short a time