Since media res starts right in the middle of the action, it captures the reader’s attention immediately.
When it comes to English Abolition and women rights, the sentence " Well, children, where there is so much racket there must be something out of kilter", contains an idiom ''out of kilter'' which means out of balance or not properly adjusted, in a state of chaos. The synonym would be ''out of whack''. In this situation we can consider this sentence to be informal.
The images and captions helps the readers or audience to understand the main idea because it provides a visual content that could support the idea that is being showed or shared to them and the captions could help in distinguishing the images or is set as a support to the images that is being shown to the readers or the audiences.
D. We both want to help the old people. We want to see that they do have
adequate medical care.
Response “D” contains information that is irrelevant to the
point Nixon was trying to make. Before
providing his information, he states, “Let us look at the record.” What the word “record” tells us is that he
will be discussing things that have already been done. For responses “A,” “B,” and “C,” Nixon
mentions accomplishments that have been done in the last seven/by the, then,
present administration—all of these are relevant to his argument. However, response “D” talks about what is
wanted, not what has been done; thus, item “D” contains information that is
irrelevant the Nixon’s argument.