Without noise.
silently
in a shy or fearful way; cautiously
Timidly
The (new) information that helps a reader better understand a text.
Background information
People who read for their own reasons, use what they know to understand, and do something with what they read.
Audience
When an animal cannot live freely in the wild.
Captivity
Writing which clearly explains or gives information about a topic.
Expository Techniques
Writing that convinces or persuades audiences to agree with their ideas or take action.
Argumentative Techniques
Anxiously
Words like "he, she, it, they" that take place of nouns in a sentence.
Pronouns
a struggle between two opposite forces
Conflict
To show or communicate clearly.
Convey
facts, statistics, expert testimony, text, or data used to support a claim or idea.
Evidence
To add more details or information.
Develop
The process through which the author creates, develops, describes, and reveals a character.
Characterization
Protecting and taking care of nature, animals, and plants so they don't disappear.
Conservation.
it's the author's or character's thoughts, feelings, and beliefs.
Perspective
(of an animal) tame and kept as a pet or on a farm.
Domesticated
An area in a museum or zoo where things like animals or objects are shown for people to see.
Exhibit
The lesson, message, or moral of a narrative text.
Theme
Showing careful consideration or attention.
Thoughtfully
When an animal cannot live freely in the wild.
Captivity
bearing annoyance, hardship, or pain calmly and without complaint or anger
Patiently
A statement that asserts something is true.
Claim
The most important point or message that the author wants the reader to understand in an expository or argumentative text. It's what the whole text is mostly about.
Main Idea
the reason or reasons WHY the text exists.
Purpose