Answer:
A
Explanation:
Whatever answer you pick cannot suggest happiness or contentment.
Prufrock is singularly lonely and so he observes loneliness around him. He thinks himself useless and ordinary so that's what he sees when he looks up at the windows and sees lonely men smoking their pipes.
Granny Weatherall (look at the name -- is it not symbolic of someone who endures all while wishing for something that seems never to be hers?), is every bit as Prufrock. She wants marriage and it is so deeply within her soul that all other grief is wiped away from her.
So what's the answer. Granny can't live life to the fullest; she simply exists and waits, and wants. Prufrock seems to be the same way. B is not the answer.
Forgive what? Achieve what kind of happiness? No C is not the answer either.
Neither one is at peace either with themselves or the world. It's not D.
That means only A is possible. It's not the best answer, but it is the best of this lot.
Just as an aside, a lot of problems would be solved for these 2 if they could just get together.
The awnser is #3 your welcome
The question is incomplete and the full version can be found online.
Answer: D) So that Americans have a choice about getting
telemarketing calls at home
Explanation:
The question refers to an excerpt of an article titled 'Telemarketing Calls' about the National Do Not Call Registry. The topic sentence in the first paragraph states that the reason the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) held for launching the Registry was to allow Americans to choose whether or not they want to get telemarketing calls at home.
It wasn´t meant to help telemarketers update their lists of consumers, nor to ban them from calling people´s home phones.
And it´s not meant to allow people to verify the information
telemarketers have about them, but to stop any calls to be made to them.
B, obviously. It's not the puppy "I" know, but Josey
:)