Is there any way you could show us a screenshot of the text? You might have to make a new question and add a picture. Or you could type the text in the comments :)
Answer:
b) "Captain Dall and Will Osten are planning a counterplot which might go wrong"
Explanation:
The underlined language in paragraph 8 is used to create tension since there is a sudden risk that things will not go as planned for Captain Dall and Will Osten.
This means that things may go wrong, and both of them may be pressured by the future consequences of their intentions and actions toward others, but they will do it anyhow in order to spoil the fun of others and prevent them from having fun.
Answer: The answer is A
Explanation: I just took the test.
Although he is not the perfect husband, brother, father, and son, Walter is by far the most complex member of the Younger family. Walter Lee wishes he was the head of the family but unfortunately for him the title belongs to mama. All Walter seems to want on the outside is the liquor store, but in reality he wants to be somebody. Walter is driven by his emotions and ambitions. A great analogy for Walter is a raccoon from the book “Where the Red Fern Grows.” Walter may seem like a desperate alcoholic just wanting a way to free booze, but in reality he is driven to lead his family, gain their approval, and become the man he can only dream to be. Walter’s role changes significantly from the beginning to the end of “A Raisin in the Sun.”
<span><em>Of Mice and Men</em> challenges the ideology of the <em>American Dream</em>. While it contains characters who dream with hopes of improving their fate, or dream just to escape their depressing realities, the end of the story reveals, through </span>Lennie’s death, that even small and modest dreams were impossible during the Great Depression in America.