The Prince of Arragon is the second suitor to come try for Portia's hand (the second one we see in the play, anyway), in Act 2, Scene 9. Like the Prince of Morocco, the Prince of Arragon reasons his way through the caskets. The lead is too plain, he suspects, and the gold too ostentatious; the "many" people who value appearances over reality would choose it but would be mistaken to do so.
In considering the silver casket, Arragon considers carefully, reflecting that many who are rich and powerful do not deserve to be so, while many who are poor and weak deserve more wealth and power than they can claim. After much reflection, Arragon decides he does, in fact, deserve Portia, saying:
As per the given option and the sentence, option (c) would be most suitable. So, "no change is necessary" is the correct change.
Why there is no need for change in the sentence?
First of all, the options contain the same word, second of all, the sentence is structured fine just there is a need for capitalization.
Therefore, the sentence needs no change, and that leaves " no change is necessary."
Check out the link below to learn more about Sentence shange;
brainly.com/question/1825102
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The answer might be D. carbon dioxide.
Hope this helps !
Photon
The answer to your question will be D