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QUESTION IMAGE

directions: independently, annotate source 2 using the annotation key a…

Question

directions: independently, annotate source 2 using the annotation key above.

source 2
megan (max’s girlfriend): “i wasn’t there. all i can say is that
max has been really different lately and kind of mean. i don’t
know what’s going on, but he’s not himself.”

Explanation:

Response

Since the annotation key isn't provided, we can still do a basic annotation based on common annotation purposes (like identifying perspective, tone, content type):

Annotation of Source 2:
  • Speaker & Relationship: Megan (Max’s girlfriend) – provides context of her relationship to Max, which may influence her perspective.
  • Alibi/Non - involvement: “I wasn’t there” – indicates she lacks direct knowledge of the event in question (whatever “there” refers to).
  • Behavioral Observation: “Max has been really different lately and kind of mean” – describes a change in Max’s behavior, suggesting possible emotional/psychological shift.
  • Uncertainty & Concern: “I don’t know what’s going on, but he’s not himself” – shows she’s unsure of the cause but recognizes Max is acting out of character, implying worry or confusion.

If we assume a common annotation key (e.g., for a case - analysis or character - behavior study), this breaks down the source into key elements: speaker, claims of non - involvement, observations of behavior, and emotional tone.

(Note: If a specific annotation key was provided (e.g., symbols for “alibi”, “character observation”, “emotional tone”), we’d map these to that key. Since it’s missing, this is a general academic annotation approach.)

Answer:

Since the annotation key isn't provided, we can still do a basic annotation based on common annotation purposes (like identifying perspective, tone, content type):

Annotation of Source 2:
  • Speaker & Relationship: Megan (Max’s girlfriend) – provides context of her relationship to Max, which may influence her perspective.
  • Alibi/Non - involvement: “I wasn’t there” – indicates she lacks direct knowledge of the event in question (whatever “there” refers to).
  • Behavioral Observation: “Max has been really different lately and kind of mean” – describes a change in Max’s behavior, suggesting possible emotional/psychological shift.
  • Uncertainty & Concern: “I don’t know what’s going on, but he’s not himself” – shows she’s unsure of the cause but recognizes Max is acting out of character, implying worry or confusion.

If we assume a common annotation key (e.g., for a case - analysis or character - behavior study), this breaks down the source into key elements: speaker, claims of non - involvement, observations of behavior, and emotional tone.

(Note: If a specific annotation key was provided (e.g., symbols for “alibi”, “character observation”, “emotional tone”), we’d map these to that key. Since it’s missing, this is a general academic annotation approach.)