Answer:
fantastic art were u got that i want it
Explanation:
Answer:
I am falling impartially on roads and roofs, on bamboo thickets, on people. In these lines from "Overhead Over S.E. Asia," the word "impartially" suggests war is waged with indifference
Explanation:
The definition of impartially is to act in a way that treats all people or situations equally, it doesn't give special treat or preference to anyone, then the word that has a similar meaning in the correct answer is indifference. Indifference means the lack of interest or enthusiasm in things, then there's nothing special that deserves a different treatment.
Remark
This is a good question to mull over. What exactly are you told? Multiple choice doesn't allow you to stray much from that point. The main point is that she was illuminated from the light coming from the open door. It doesn't suggest we go hunting for what that might mean.
However the commentary does (that's your second sheet). It defines dark. It defines light and it defines blind and bland.
With this set of comments in mind, let's choose an answer.
A is likely true. But is that what we are told? The commentary hints at it, but we have not gotten into the narrator's head. Not yet. We'll come back to this if we have to.
He's not confused. Not here anyway. I wouldn't pick B.
C Maybe. That's more hinted at in the commentary than it is in the single sentence we have to work with. I would say it is too big a leap. I wouldn't choose it.
D since this is mentioned in the commentary, it can't be eliminated.
E we have no hint of this, even if it is true, which it could be.
So what are we left with?
A and D with a small nod (very small) to C.
I think I'd go with A, but I wouldn't be the least surprised if it was one of the other 2. If you feel that D is the better answer, go with it. This is a coin tossing time.
She didn't relate playing baseball with her father. She related that she didn't ever think she'd address an audience this large in a place like Yankee Stadium. What she related was that the only way she ever saw the Stadium was by sitting next to her dad watching a ball game.
How in the world are you going to distinguish A and C when A is a lot less specific than C but C is 1/2 wrong?
I would pick C, but I'll wager it is actually A. It's a bit of a trick question.