It seems it is somehow humorous because the man end up saying that if you can do it on your own, you can take the car to their place and they will do it for you.
It could not be angry or annoyed because he is willing to explain and he is even making a video about it.
As regards bitter, it does not fit as a possibility for the video or his explanation of the subject.
Most likely the answer would be A
Since transvestites are men who dress up as women, I am going to assume that the use of cross-dressing <span>makes Twelfth Night one of Shakespeare's transvestite comedies, and there are many of those, actually.</span>
1- The stress syllables are used to highlight the important words and concepts as in <em>To </em><em>speak</em><em> of </em><em>that </em><em>which </em><em>gives</em><em> thee </em><em>all </em><em>thy </em><em>might</em><em>? </em>(bold-faced parts are the stress syllables).
2- The (mostly) regular rhythm does highlight the overall emotional weight on the poem, just try it by reading it out loud as the stress syllables are easy to identify.
There is no evidence of sarcasm nor anger throughout the poem.
Answer:
Dr. Tyson's interview is not well-organized, while his preface
is clearly organized so the reader can easily understand it.
Explanation: