Answer:Verbal irony
verbal irony is when someone says/writes something and means something different
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
With my school experience I would have to say B, because a transitive verb has to be an action verb and express a doable activity. An example would be: Sylvia KICKED Juan under the table.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The answer is C.  "the man's behavour led me to guess...upset in someone."
  Sentences A and B describe the actions and manners, showing the man's behaviour and anxiety: casting quick glances, his foot beating on the hot pavement etc. appearing he could even explode with anger.  At some point (C), <em>he changed and just got calm, wainting silently, leading the speaker to wonder if the cause of all this could be the bus' delay.</em>
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
D. Georgia O’Keeffe was a woman who spoke through her art, regardless of the critics and her conventional childhood.
Explanation:
The only answer choice that talks about art and all the other choices sound irrelevant.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Colonial literature was inspired and fueled by Puritanism. It was religious and spiritual in nature and style, and in line with the major political upheavals of its day and age. The most notable nonfiction works include John Winthrop's The History of New England and William Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation, both of which can be regarded as memoirs that explore and depict troubles and daily occurrences that colonizers faced in their early effort to establish their new home. There were also sermons that urged the colonizers to lead pious and devoted lives, following the paths of God - the most notable of these sermons is John Winthrop's A Model of Christian Charity. In it, Winthrop addresses the specific temptations that the Puritans were facing in the New World.
Poets were also drawing inspiration from religious and daily matters that occupied lives of these people in their small communities. But there were a few authentic voices, female and Afro-American: as a woman writer, Anne Bradstreet was mainly preoccupied with familial topics. while Phillis Wheatley is considered the first female representative of African-American poetry.