I think the closest answer would be Conflict that arises from misunderstandings and trickery are resolved by the end of the play. The term 'tragedy' would be a terrible downfall that the character brings on his/herself and sometimes other people suffer as well. A tragedy is not bad luck
hope this made sense ;)
The answer is Is ice cream cold?
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<em>Hi there!</em>
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<em>Adam couldn't </em><em><u>resist adding</u></em><em> a moustache to the photo of his father-in-law in the newspaper.</em>
<em>a. resist from adding.</em>
<em><u>b. resist adding.</u></em>
<em>c. resist for adding.</em>
<em>d. resist to adding.</em>
<em>Hope this helped you!</em>
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The narrator says of Clifford, "fate has no happiness in store for you" other than what he currently enjoys, so he should appreciate it
I have read the excerpt from John F. Kennedy's 1961 Inaugural Address and how this excerpt shows parallelism is that, each paragraph contains a warning and a pledge. He also makes use of repetition "Let both sides" and this conveys unity in his inaugural speech. Answer for this is the second option.