Hey there,
Answer: I don't mind others giving me advice but the moment they start bossing me around I really don't like it. So, i'll listen to it but I have the rights to follow it or not. But if it is your family members whom are saying it then it is probably for your own good.
Hope this helps :D
<em>~Top♥</em>
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Answer:
A) Narrator thinks sledges are better and D) Furs are the best for cold weather
Answer:
"A young clerk who works in a tin works factory. Miss Sasaki becomes trapped in the wreckage of a factory when a bookcase crashes onto her. For weeks she receives no real medical care for her leg, which is badly fractured and infected, and she remains crippled for the rest of her life. After the war, with the guidance of Father Kleinsorge, she becomes a nun, Sister Dominique Sasaki.
Miss Sasaki is a twenty-year-old clerk who works hard to take care of her siblings and parents. The bomb collapses the factory where she works, and she becomes pinned underneath a bookcase that crushes her leg. For weeks she receives no real medical care for her badly fractured and infected leg, and she remains crippled for the rest of her life. After the war she suffers greatly as a bomb victim and a cripple. Her fiancé abandons her, and she is scarred emotionally as well as physically. After Father Kleinsorge encourages her to convert to Christianity and become a nun, she has a distinguished career, travels around the world, and becomes optimistic about her future.
Miss Sasaki comes closest to representing the many nameless, wounded survivors of the bomb. Several doctors treat her callously; because her injury is severe but not mortal or mysterious, she garners very little sympathy from anyone. She is completely immobilized, so she does not become involved in the communal efforts that most of the other characters take part in. As a result, she suffers mostly in isolation."
Explanation:
Nominative case pronoun would be a pronoun in its basic form, so: I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they...
So, the correct answer is A, 'I' is a nominative case pronoun, whereas the other examples only have objective case pronouns: them, him, her.