Answer:
number 2
Explanation:
The underlined ones are wrong.
The point of the <u>struggel</u> is to win, so if the prize is not one, you have merely wasted your time.
Imagine that you work on your trumpet solo for weeks, <u>the performance</u> night finally arrives.
<u>But</u> you get nervous in front of the audience, and it is not successful.
You would not feel satisfied by your effort, but rather disappointed at not achieving your goal.
Shaded by trees///of payments///heandband
Answer:
No
Explanation:
That kind of thing just doesn't exist. If you do believe in that kind of stuff, then your living in a fantasy land.
Lovborg believes that he can confide in Hedda because she has an unwavering hold over him. When they were together prior to her marriage to George, she made him tell her everything, even the wicked things he had done, many of which he states were not the type of things one tells in mixed company. She had so bewitched him that realized, with her, he could hold nothing back, she would find a way to pry it out of him. This is demonstrated in the manner in which Hedda led him to break his sobriety. For him, it was impossible to say "no" to her, even though he knew it might cause him pain and that she might, later, use it against him.
I would say C is the best answer, as he does not to seem very bothered at all, more or less angry or annoyed.