<span>There is some parallel between Sissy’s story and Dickens’ own. When he was 12 years old, Dickens was sent to work at Warren’s Blacking Factory (Coketown, come on) after his father was imprisoned for debt. Claire Tomalin asserts in her superb recent biography about Dickens that, when he was rescued by his parents neither he nor they uttered a single word about it to one another. So I suspect that Dickens was strongly attached to Sissy in a very personal way. And for me, a world without Sissy Jupe would be a world without Dickens.</span>
The answer is D because a noun is a person place or thing
In my opinion, the correct answer is D. <span>Combine sentences to lengthen them. Most of these sentences are short and have a simple structure. Some of them could be put together, for example: Succeeding him as king was his 15-year old son, Edward III; however, he was king in name only, whereas the real rulers were the queen and her sweetheart Roger Mortimer, both of whom were instrumental in the ousting of Edward II.</span>
Answer B: it is a speech by a character seemingly alone and thinking aloud. Most famously is Juliets soliloquy when she wonders aloud ‘Romeo, Romeo, where for art thou Romero’