Discover a world of knowledge at Westonci.ca, where experts and enthusiasts come together to answer your questions. Get immediate and reliable solutions to your questions from a community of experienced professionals on our platform. Connect with a community of professionals ready to provide precise solutions to your questions quickly and accurately.

Based on the details of this excerpt, a reader can inter
that
Read the excerpt from "The Telephone: A Truer Tale."
At about the same time that Antonio Meucci was filing
patent caveats for his talking telegraph, Alexander
Graham Bell was starting to work on his own telephone
model. Bell was an expert in the field of elocution, or
vocal speech. He was very skilled at teaching deat
students the challenging task of speaking aloud. Just like
Meucci, he enjoyed experimenting. Bell also dreamed of
a world full of useful telephones, just as Meucci did.
However, he had something that Meucci did not. Bell had
a wealthy father-in-law who was happy to invest in his
dream
Meucci did not succeed because he was not as
talented as Bell
Bell's expertise in elocution helped him to develop the
telephone
Bell succeeded because he had more financial
resources than Meucci
Meucci's caveats prevented Bell from filing a patent
for the telephone
No

Sagot :

vaduz

Answer:

Bell succeeded because he had more financial  resources than Meucci.

Explanation:

In the given passage, the narrator talks about how the idea of inventing the telephone came to be. Though two people have the same idea to make a working communicative machine, only one succeeded.

Antonio Meucci was working on his talking telegraph while Alexander Graham Bell was working on the telephone. While both men have the same idea, Meucci's did not work because of financial constraints, which Bell has, in the form of his father-in-law. This enabled Bell to succeed in further developing and eventually bringing forth the telephone.

Thus, the correct answer is the third option.