The correct answer would be the first option. A collective subject is a noun (functioning as the subject) that describes a group made of many parts. For example, the words "team" which means a group of people playing. Another one is "pack" used in a pack of wolves, which means a group of wolves.
Answer:
This is false.
Example:
"Do you enjoy the rain? (I enjoy the rain.) I hope it rains tomorrow.
Answer:
A best describes the answer.
Explanation:
Because B is cost to the passage
C cannot be the answer because the narrator himself utter the words
D is far enough from the answer as there is no such words used as chest in the parragraph
The part of the excerpt which most clearly reveals that the narrator has monstrous qualities is the one we find in letter B: I was rude and took pleasure in being so.
Dostoyevsky often explored his characters' self criticism by having them describe what they were like in detail. Like in "Crime and Punishment", where Raskolnikov has noble virtues and makes plans to kill an old lady at the same time, the narrator of "Notes from the Underground" also seems positively appealing to the reader, since he portrays himself as a victim of circumstances, who had some monstrous features as a way to defend himself from a cruel world. What seems monstrous about the aforementioned part of the excerpt is that not only did he know he was rude, he also stated to enjoy it, and lots of rude people out there have no idea they are so.