Answer:
The best option is letter B) "After a good dinner one can forgive anybody," joked a character in one of Oscar Wilde's plays, "even one's own reflections."
Explanation:
When quoting what someone said, even if it is a character in a play or a story, we must use quotation marks. Notice that they will separate the character's words from the words of the person who is quoting. Also, if a period or a comma must appear, they should come inside the quotation marks, not outside. Therefore, letter B is the best option because it follows those instructions.
B) "After a good dinner one can forgive anybody," joked a character in one of Oscar Wilde's plays, "even one's own reflections."
B. Macro
*micro = small
*mal = bad
Answer:
First Muir described how he slept sometimes without supper, and then he says he had no difficulty finding a loaf of bread at the farmers' houses. He starts of the paragraph with a complaint of sleeping without blankets, and starts to transition again into nature and its beauty. In the paragraph, Muir says "Storms, thunderclouds, winds in the woods—were welcomed as friends;" when we hear storms, thunderclouds, winds, etc. it brings fear, damage, but Muir then says "were welcomed as friends."
<span>What you do feel, however, is something far more sinister.
According to the passage the tidal force will try to pull your feet faster into the black hole than your head. Since the force will be different on various parts of your body, it will cause a terrible pain. In the options to answer this question, the only option that tells use this force will be quite painful is when the force is described as sinister. The others options mention the tidal force, but they do not indicate that it will result in pain.
</span>
Can you be more specific with your question I don’t think we understand