<span>Parenthetical citations are not needed when the direct quotation is common knowledge.
Things that fall into the category of common knowledge are proverbs or well-known quotations. "To be or not to be" would not be cited because it is part of common knowledge. "A rising tide lifts all ships" is a proverb that would not be cited. Parenthetical citations are used to identify the source of the quotation. They typically include the author's last name and page number (if available). If the author's name is unknown, the title of the work is used. When the author and/or title of the work has been stated in the introduction to the quote, then only a page number would be needed. </span>
Answer: B The narrator and the other travelers are joyous.
Explanation:
The question is in relation to a short story called <em>The Trip of Le Lorla</em> by <em>Guy de Maupassant</em>. In it, the narrator and other travelers travel aboard the La Lorla which is a hot air balloon.
When the La Horla takes off, the narrator speaks of little of their emotions but did mention that their friends on the ground were were full of glee and applauded. The La Horla then catches a current of warm wind and is pulled up into the sky to a height of over a thousand meters.
When this happens the narrator states how they were all entailed by the feeling of being so high up and so joyous that they forgot all problems they may have had and had no thoughts but the joy that they felt from the flight.
Answer:
the king's wife had a sharp tongue and small respect for the king.
Explanation:
Readers gain insight into why the cat avoids the narrator.