It depends.
'Mike and Mary's Pizza' is most likely a place, and a noun is a person, place, or thing. If it is a person's name, a place (such as a street name, name of a place, a city, a country, a town..) it must be capitalized. Just regular English rules.
Now, if the Mike and Mary HAD a pizza, you would not need to capitalize pizza considering it is the object. Here's an example of a sentence where you wouldn't need to capitalize pizza - "Mike and Mary's pizza was cheese." Now here's an example of where you would want to capitalize pizza - "I am headed to Mike and Mary's Pizza to get some food."
Answer:
The best response would be to explain the logic behind the idea and why it it a good one. this would grab her attention and make her listen. The worst response would be to convince the other employees and use their influence on the reluctant employee. No one is going to listen when there is a group of people attacking asking her to join and why not if she says no.
Explanation:
<span>The passage of the dialogue is written:
</span>
B. correctly
Punctuation such as quotation marks which highlight the speech; comma is put at the right place which includes the emphasis of two different ideas; and period is also correctly placed every after the end of the sentence. Lastly, page breaks are correctly implemented.
I think it’s A, it’s probably not B