Answer:
Part A: C. Constancia doesn’t realize the effect that her actions have on others
Part B: C. ”I don’t understand why she’s so upset"
Explanation:
This is the excerpt from Judith Ortiz Cofer's short story "Abuela Invents the Zero".
Although no specific dialogue is cited in the question, I'm assuming it refers to the dialogue between Constancia and her mother at the end of the story.
Constancia's grandmother comes to a visit and, being a Catholic, she wants to attend the Sunday mass. It is decided that Constancia will escort her to the church since her mothet is sick and her father stays to take care of her.
Constancia accepts reluctantly but the situation only gets worse when she feels embarrassed by her grandmother's appearance and behaviour at the church.
When Abuela gets lost in the church, Constancia doesn't help her at all, not wanting people to see them together.
This selfish act hurt Abuela so she doesn't speak to Constancia on their way home nor she accepts her help with walking.
This only shows that Constancia only cared about how her grandma embarrassed her and what her friend would say of this; she didn't care about her Abuela's feelings or helping her.
This can also best be seen from her excuses when mother confronts her and she still seems unaware of the fact she hurt her grandmother's feelings.
Answer:
B). The author's last name.
E). The page number.
Explanation:
Parenthetical citations are described as the reference or citations to a specific information, quote, or paraphrasing from the text or from some other source.
As per the question, an in-text or parenthetical citation(in MLA format) must need information of the 'author's last name' followed by 'the page number'. This reflects that the author is properly acknowledging the original sources or references which have been referred to in the work or paper. For example; ('Lawrence, 123'). Therefore, <u>options B and E</u> are the correct answers.
A - because an alliteration is a phrase using one letter at the beginning of each multiple words.
Negative remarks, critiques, and unjustified expectations we have of a child are the first signs of an inferiority complex or poor self-esteem.
- They develop into the kid's internal voice. Children who avoid interacting with classmates are showing signs of poor self-esteem. Children start to develop sentiments of inferiority as they become increasingly conscious of their flaws and compare themselves to others; these beliefs then inspire them and direct their behavior.
- Being harassed or taunted for being different from classmates can also result in feelings of inferiority, the author adds. "It can also result from receiving negative feedback or being informed they are weak or lacking in some way. When this message persists, it may make one feel inadequate."
Thus this is how a child develop an inferiority complex.
Refer here to learn more about inferiority complex: brainly.com/question/29459971
#SPJ4