Out of all the pronouns, "whom" makes the most sense grammatically. This allows us to narrow it down to A or D.
In order for it to be the object of a preposition, there would have to be a preposition in front of it. "For," however is <em>not</em> a preposition. In fact, there isn't a preposition in the whole question.
This leaves us with option D, which is the correct answer.
You can better tell it's a direct object if you flip the sentence around a bit.
Your sister is waiting <em>for whom</em>?
"Whom" is essentially receiving the action. "Whom" is what your sister is waiting for.
Answer: D. whom; direct object.
B: she misses her home country
Judith Ortiz´s Cofers gravity tells the story of a puerto rican girl that is now living in an apartment building in New Jersey. As her mom is puerto rican and grew up there, she misses her home country.
Answer:
1. b
2.c
3. c
4.d
5.c
6.b
7.a
8. d
9.c
10.a
Explanation:
dont actually do those answers those r only maybe answers
This all sounds like something they want YOU to decide.