I'd say D, because that seems like a good writers strategy. To give information centered around the narrative and theme. Otherwise, A.
<em>This is like a story plus a claim following your requests. Hope it helps you, though.</em>
<h3>We call the meeting to order

11:42 AM</h3>
This is the case-claim of the missing french fries. It happened last Sunday, when I made a claim that I witnessed frozen french fries being stolen by a group of people at a store. The store retrieved the fries on Wednesday <em>today</em>. Thankfully, they were not damaged. Still in good condition, still edible. "What evidence is there"? Good question, I saw it at the store and recorded it. I presented the recording, and all is well that ends well!
<em>This claim is not based on an actual case. This is fictional, and any relation to an actual person is purely coincedential.</em>
Answer:
The Answer is (c) A, A, B, B
Explanation:
The opportunity cost of going to a night party instead of babysitting at home is:
- The benefit of taking care of the baby adequately and completing your work that you would have gained from babysitting that night.
<h3>What is an opportunity cost?</h3>
This is the loss of value or benefit that would have been incurred by engaging in an activity rather than engaging in an alternative activity.
The opportunity cost in this scenario is the value of what you gave up in other to attend the party, which was to babysit the child and take proper care of the baby.
In conclusion, an opportunity cost is the loss of other alternatives when one alternative is already chosen.
Read more about <em>opportunity cost</em> here:
brainly.com/question/481029
Answer:
WHAT THE I DONT KNOW THIS, yea cant help you bud