What passage are you talking about exactly...?
1. Three out of four school teachers prefer Bright Marks Markers, but I only asked four teachers total.
2. You visit a new country and the first person you meet in the airport is rude. You send a message to a friend back home that everyone in this new country is rude.
<span>3. Christine has a terrible experience with a boyfriend. She decides that all boys are mean.
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“Aroma” is the connotation of the word “smell” in the above sentence.
All the words “aroma,” “stench,” “scent” and “fragrance” are related to smell but of different types. “Aroma” basically defines the smell from the food mixed with that of flowers contributing to building the ambiance of a place. “Stench” on the other hand is a foul and unpleasant smell. “Scent” and “fragrance” both are equivalent words to define the sweet and pleasant smell especially smell of flowers, perfumes etc.
Answer:
B The dizzying height from which the narrator regards the city streets
Explanation
In the scene in which the image of the taxicab appears, the narrator is standing 70 feet above the ground, on the fire stair of the Carnegie Hall.
<u>In one of the previous sentences, he describes how he clenches tightly to the railing, while in the same sentence he refers to "the steep drop" and "reaching me from seven floors below". </u>
These are the reasons why we know he refers to the <u>dizzying heights</u> and not the effects of the rain, even though it is the stormy night.
We also know he is not in the taxicab or at Times Square, which is why options C and E are not true, and he does not talk about any other taxicabs, which is why option D is false.