Answer:
The writer of the text - A Brief History of Football – and “Soccer” uses informal english lanuage to communicate to the readers. His tone is rather colloquial and conversational.
This style supports the point he is trying to make because the evolution of and adoption of the word "soccer" for instance seem to have happened informally and became adapted from the more formal phrase "Association Football".
Cheers
Im 99% sure the answer is B mostly because the others just don't make much sense.
Cassius and Brutus take their own lives at the end of Julius Caesar to avoid being captured by the enemy. Cassius knows he will soon be captured by Antony and Octavius. He will more than likely be dragged through the streets of Rome in chains so he orders Pindarus to hold his sword ready and he impales himself on his sword.
<span>In the last scene of the tragedy, Brutus realizes that he and his remaining servants will be captured. He eventually convinces Strato to hold his sword for him as he impales himself on his own sword. </span>
A person making a humble plea to someone in power or authority.<span>synonyms:<span>petitioner, supplicant, pleader, beggar, applicant"they were not mere suppliants"</span></span>