Answer:
Since dramatic irony means a character does not know or understand something that the audience knows or understands, then the opposite would be a character who does know what the audience knows.
Explanation:
Answer:I managed to find the complete exercise on the Internet, given that you haven't provided us with all options given to you.
1. cogitating = contemplating
To cogitate means to think about something (cogito in Latin literally means 'to think). Contemplating means to mull over a couple (or a lot) of options which is what Mr. Gamefield is doing in the excerpt above - he is thinking of ways to pay his rent.
2. cudgeling = beating
A cudgel is a short stick which you can use as a weapon. So if you cudgel something or someone, it means that you are beating them with a cudgel, because it is a thick stick, almost like a bat. So this person was metaphorically cudgeling his brain, but literally cudgeling his donkey.
3. regaled = rewarded
The verb to regale has two meanings - it can either mean 'to entertain someone,' or it can mean 'to supply someone with something.' Here, the latter meaning is used - the donkey thought he would be given a cabbage-stalk or two for his hard work
Explanation:
The answer is D, Article. An article is a written report that will always use a noun so the words like an, the, or it.
Answer:
I think it is B but I could be wrong. Because POV. Is a way someone sees something through their own way.
It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. What makes Sandra Day O'Connor's memoirs worth noting is that <span>she became the first female justice of supreme court. Hope this answers your question.</span>