Both A and D are really close though.I'm leaning more toward D, since it mentions more about getting in the way of the German troops.
Example 1: "There, she helped to set up more resistance groups and organize sabotage actions."
<span>Example 2: "Her actions, along with those of her colleagues, often delayed the arrival of German reinforcements to the front lines of battle."</span>
Although we never learn exactly what changes Hamlet asked The Players to make in their script, it is almost certain that the changes included the dumb show portion that presents the Fellow pouring poison into the King’s ear as well as the lines about fidelity and widowhood. One aspect of the irony is that Hamlet requested the changes so he could watch Claudius’s reaction: to “catch the conscience of a king.” He later tells his step-father. Dramatic irony is simply giving the audience more information than another character has. When Gertrude says this, she is speaking to the audience, not another character. She is foreshadowing any negative consequences of another character's actions.
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My father studied about the Nile River with proessor Waleed D. Najaar at Smithtown University
Answer:
I think it's A.understatement and irony.
Explanation: