Has punam made the thing?
It's D. Spatial Order
None of the other answers make sense :/
Anglo-Saxon were a cultural group of people that lived in Great Britain around the 5th century. That being said, words with an Anglo-Saxon origin are those that were used by this groups many years ago but in a different way than we use them now in modern English. Some of those words from this list are:
Anglo-Saxon word Modern English word
- Fæder - Father
- Modor - Mother
- Wine - Friend
- Sceap - Sheep
- Is
- He
- Me
The answer is: A, B, C, D, E, G and M
The best answer here is the last one, that he interacts easily with both his superiors and the drivers. In the excerpt, we see how the narrator is able to talk with the officers with ease and then how he goes to the drivers with that same ease.
If we look at the other answers, we can see that they don't work. The first one doesn't make much sense as the narrator shows no preference towards either set of people. The second choice makes no sense because the narrator does not ask the officers for cigarettes. The third choice also does not make sense because there is no hint of derision from the narrator to the officers or drivers.
When Orson Welles broadcasted War of the Worlds in 1938, it was clearly stated at the beginning of the program that he was reading from the novel written by H. G. Wells. As a matter of fact, the beginning of the novel was the part that was changed the least - it described how the human race was being observed and studied by other forms of life from outer space.
, after such a introduction, played music as if it was a regular radio program. Then he , as if he was reporting important news that had just happened. It was in the form of news bulletins that .