<em>Consumers are trading retail store shopping for online shopping.</em> This is the correct option.
The three consumers are clicking on " different windows" on their mobile phones. They will not longer look at real shop windows, therefore , they are window shopping virtually. They are doing this because they will probably buy things on line. They will not go to a retail shop; one of the customers has a newspaper showing the news that this type of shops are closing down. So, as there are more people buying on line, the retail shops will disappear. A new way of window shopping has arrived.
These options are not right:
-Consumers get their news online, not from newspapers. ( The focus is set on buying things from shops. It is not set on the origin of the news).
-Consumers have an increasing desire to acquire new things. ( The desire must have been always the same. Now, the focus is on the consumers' access to the new things they desire).
-Consumers have an increasing desire to acquire new things. ( The cartoon has set the focus on a new way of shopping. The new way of shopping can be done through technology).
I would go with c.Good luck !
It brings out a sences of trust and hurt.
Twain’s use of dialect in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn contributes to the realism of the story by making the settings and character more convincing for the readers. By adding accurate social dialects into his story, Twain depicts a truthful vision of the souther society that fits the characters' backgrounds, the time period and the location. This is no exception in the case of Huck and Jim. Jim, in this novel, is a slave who is less educated than the average person; therefore, to make his character more believable to the readers, Jim's way of speaking uses slang, shortened words and improper grammar. This can be seen in phrases like "Whar is you?", "ag'in", "sumf'n", etc.