The author's message is that there has been a notable rise in the extinction rates of numerous animal species in recent years. He opens his argument in the excerpt's first sentence by stating: "Species are disappearing at an accelerating rate due to human activities, mainly habitat destruction, along with pollution and the introduction of non-native species into remaining natural environments." He subsequently stresses this point with the statement: "As the last forests are cut down in significant forest zones like the Philippines and Ecuador, the decline of species will further accelerate." He supports his claim by stating: "Globally, extinction rates have surged hundreds or even thousands of times higher than before humans arrived.".
Result:
insufficient information.
Explanation:
the actual body paragraph is lacking
Answer: This message is missing this quality: Complete
Explanation:
For instance, the message does not specify the time and location for dinner.
Consequently, even if the recipient might be available at a certain hour, they would have no way of knowing due to the absence of time mentioned.
Including the time and location allows the receiver to review their availability and make a decision based on that information.
In his poem "Aunt Imogen," Edwin Arlington Robinson employs gentle and melodic language infused with sentimentality and romance, drawing us into a moment where Aunt Imogen cradles her small relative. She grapples internally with her feelings of solitude, juxtaposed with the happiness and love she must provide to her sister's children during the brief time they have together. Aunt Imogen finds herself in a struggle, yet she chooses silence and learns from this challenging moment, through reflections that motivate her to persevere without harming anyone or prioritizing her own needs above others. The line "The pang that wrenched her face and filled her eyes with anguish and intolerable mist" captures the intense sorrow that besets Aunt Imogen, a pain that her gaze cannot conceal. The verses "She was not born to be so much that, for she was born to be Aunt Imogen" profoundly illustrate her determination to rise above this transient sadness and comprehend the essential role she must embrace within the lives of the children and her sister, irrespective of anything else.