"D" <em>make an inference</em>
When there are gaps of information, you usually want to look at the text and the information given to make an inference of what you think the author might mean/ what information needs to be in the context to make the text understandable. The author is trying to get you to make inferences and think for yourself.
I hope this helps!
~kaikers
Answer:
Question 1 - round and dynamic.
Question 2 - Margarita's grandmother passed away, which inspired her to volunteer at a nursing home.
Explanation:
Question 1:
In literature, characters who change and grow over the course of a particular text are known as dynamic characters. If we know a lot of their characteristics, then they are also round characters. On the other hand, static characters do not change and we know only one or two of their defining characteristics, which also makes them flat.
Question 2:
As stated previously, round characters are those who change and grow due to some conflict. In option B, the conflict is found in the passing of Margarita's grandmother. As a result, Margarita grew and decided to volunteer at a nursing home.
Questions 3, 4, 5, and 6 are impossible to answer without the Module or the short story.
Answer: 10 percent
Explanation:
A direct quotation is a report of the exact same words of an author and is placed inside quotation marks (") in a written work. They differ from the indirect quotation because in those you paraphrase, write with your own words, what the author said.
If your quotations constitute more than ten percent of the research paper you would make your own paper hard to read because you´ll move from one quotation to another. The quotation must be used only to support your own ideas or refute the other author´s ones.