In a text with a sequence text structure, the author

Question 1 options:

Describes a topic and its characteristics

Explains how things are similar and different.

Tells about events in the order they happened.

Describes a problem and then explains how someone solved it.

Tells about events in the order they happened.

How does the author organize "Lots of lottery winners go bankrupt"?

Question 3 options:

Descriptive

Problem/solution

Cause/effect

Compare/contrast

Problem/solution

Which text structure might use words and phrases like: because, so, since due to as a result of?

Question 4 options:

Problem and solution

Sequence

Cause and effect

Compare and contrast

Cause and effect

Which text structure might use words and phrases like: problem, issue, solution, question?

Question 5 options:

Sequence

Problem and solution

Cause and effect

Description

Problem and solution

The foundation of every pizza is the crust, and good crust comes from good dough. You might be surprised to learn that pizza is made from nothing more than flour, water, yeast, olive oil, salt, and sometimes sugar. Start by adding your yeast packet to a cup of olive oil, two teaspoons of sugar, and a teaspoon of salt. Mix all of that together and wait half an hour for the dough to rise. Now you're ready to roll it out!

What type of pattern is this an example of?

Question 1 options:

listing

sequence

process

problem and solution

sequence

Cooking the perfect pizza at home can be quite a challenge. You may find that it's difficult to get your oven to the right temperature. If the oven is too hot the crust will burn, become hard, and taste bad. If your oven isn't hot enough, the crust may get soggy. Even at the perfect temperature, extra moisture from your ingredients may prevent the bottom of the crust from fully cooking, but don't let oven temperatures stop you from building the pizza of your dreams. Get yourself a pizza stone. A pizza stone will get very hot when preheated and will allow your crust to fully cook without burning it. Then you can pile the ingredients on your pizza and have a crispy crust that isn't burned. That's the way to go.

What type of pattern is this an example of?

Question 2 options:

cause and effort

problem and solution

sequence

process