I think the answer to your questions is B.
Answer:
She could more easily help with morning chores.
She was refreshed and awake in class.
She had a quick commute to school each day.
Explanation:
Based on the foreword of Wheels of Change, the short-term effects of Mary Lewanika receiving a bicycle was that she got to school earlier and was awake in class, she got to school quicker, and she could help out more in morning chores.
Mary Lewanika was a school girl who had to trek long distances to get to school and as a result, she got to school late and her academics were affected. However, when she was gifted a bicycle, it helped her to commute to school faster.
<span>1) Viola enters Orsino's court dressed as a male.
</span><span>2) Olivia asks Cesario about his parentage.
</span>3) <span>Malvolio makes a fool of himself in front of Olivia.
</span>4) <span>Sebastian reveals to Antonio that he has a twin sister.
</span>5) Feste returns the ring to Cesario that Orsino had given to Olivia.
6) <span>Antonio offers to take Cesario's place in the duel.</span>
Answer: A) Instead of horses pulling carriages full of people, people pull carriages full of horses.
Explanation: an irony is a state of affairs or an event that seems contrary to what one expects and it often has an amusing result. A situational irony is when what happens is the contrary to what the characters or the audience are expecting to happen. From the given options, the sentence that describes an example of situational irony in Gulliver's Travels, is the corresponding to option A, because it is the contrary of what one would expect.
Let us first define the meaning of misplaced modifier; it is a word, clause, or phrase that is improperly placed in a sentence which make it refer or modify an unintended word.
The first, second, and third sentences that are given above sound correct because their modifiers are placed just right. Only the fourth sentence sounded awkwardly and confusing, because the clause "who lives in New York" is improperly separated from the subject "My aunt", which must be described in the first place, and not the "holidays".
The sentence will sound and can be understood better if it is written this way,
"My aunt, who lives in New York, is coming home for the holidays."