Thank you, Jennifer! I did skip to page 183. I'm pleased that I figured out the word with the help of my trusty dictionary.
Now I'm curious if any of you had ever heard this word before you read To Understand? Made me wonder how ignorant I am about reading. Jan -------------- Original message from [EMAIL PROTECTED]: -------------- > > Anaphora is explained in greater detail in a later chapter! If you cannot > wait, skip to pg 183. :-) > Jennifer > In a message dated 7/16/2008 9:58:58 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > > Figure 2.3d has the word "anaphora." I looked that word up, and found the > definition not very helpful. The closest I can get to the meaning in the > figure is a difficultly the reader has in knowing the reference of a > pronoun. > Is that right? > > I'll stop for now. I have loads of other questions and thoughts. I'll get > to those later. _______________________________________________ Understand mailing list Understand@literacyworkshop.org http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/listinfo/understand_literacyworkshop.org