Maybe I think the answer is B. I'm not sure .
Based on the given quotes above, the one that best represents the central conflict in "Marigolds" is this: <span>"It ain’t right. Ain’t no man ought to eat his woman’s food year in and year out, and see his children running wild. Ain’t nothing right about that." The answer for this would be option C. Hope this helps.</span>
According to the excerpt, the option that identifies an implicit meaning one could draw from it would be the second one: "Locke is unfamiliar with the term <em>idea</em>".
In the excerpt, Locke is not asking what Idea is nor is he being uncertain about the relationship between speculative and practical ideas. He seems to never heard it before and the exact meaning fades away.
That's why he asks what it represents and not its definition or for someone to repeat the explanation. He just needs an example to clarify the boundaries of the <em>idea's</em> meaning.
<span>C. She lives on the twentieth floor of an old apartment building somewhere in Manhattan.
This option is accurate since it contains articles and modifiers that are grammatically correct:
i) "the" is used before the word "twentieth" (a noun modified by ordering- i.e. first, second, third, and so on...)
ii) "an" is used before the word "old" (which begins with a vowel)
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The format, structure and timeline of the story