<span>A ship on
the ocean is floating so still upon a sea with so little waves that not even the
bell on warning buoy is made to ring.
The setting is cheery—a bright, sunny with the sound of chirping birds—that
made Sir Ralph whistle. However, in this
happy setting, Sir Ralph rows from his ship to the buoy and cuts off the bell
in wickedness. As he is sailing away to
Scotland back on his ship, the weather turns and the ship is tossed about all
day in a storm. His crew begins to fear
they may be close to land again, and the mention how they wish they were able
to hear the bell Sir Ralph had cut. The
ship runs aground and begins to sink, and as it sinks and in with Sir Ralph’s “dying
fear,” he can hear the sound of the bell ringing as if it were being rung by
the Devil. </span>
I'm pretty sure everyone will be really upset because you look forward to being able to vote at age 18and it suddenly changes
Answer: B. A sumo wrestler near the top of the elite pyramid may earn millions of dollars.
Explanation: In the given excerpt from Levitt and Dubner’s Freakonomics we can see the explanation of how the ranking in sumo wrestling works, and how there is an elite pyramid of the sixty-six highest-ranked wrestlers in Japan who are treated like royalty and may earn millions of dollars a year, while the wrestlers that aren't in the elite are treated like servants by their superiors, this situation might incentive a sumo wrestler to cheat.
“To catch a tartar“ is an example of an idiom. This means to encounter someone that’s dangerous, troublesome, and powerful. For example, the police were going to catch a tartar. This means that the police were going to catch some that was very dangerous.
~Good luck
The answer to your question is,
B. Through oral storytelling.
-Mabel <3