A) to the circus B) to a polo match C) to another ball game D) on a cruise
A) Main Street B) Ball Park Road C) First Avenue D) Crawford Street
A) rainy B) snowy C) windy D) sunny
A) his brother B) his father C) his cousin D) his grandpa
A) baseball B) football C) tennis D) polo
A) a home run B) the hoop's net C) the polo mallet D) a fly ball
A) train B) bus C) airplane D) taxi
A) hyperbole B) simile C) onomatopoeia D) alliteration
A) how to take a train to the city B) how to play baseball C) to always go to a game with a grownup D) how to use other senses to enjoy the game
A) Dad and Charlie B) Charlie and train conductor C) Tammy and Dad D) Charlie and Tammy
A) realistic fiction B) fairy tale C) biography D) historical fiction
A) whoosh B) pop C) boom D) crack
A) They were sitting too far up in the stands to see the games well. B) Charlie used sound, not sight, to enjoy the games. C) The games were between deaf and blind players. D) The cheering crowd could be heard for miles.
A) thesaurus B) index C) atlas D) dictionary
A) Charlie, what else can I see with my ears? B) How can you hear an out? C) How can I see with my ears, Charlie? D) Have you ever been to the circus?
A) He heard the cheering crowd. B) Tammy told him. C) He heard the ball pass through the net. D) Tammy jumped out of her seat.
A) to make the page look nice B) to emphasize those sounds C) to show feeling D) to show excitement
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