The correct answer is this one: "correct as is." The sentence I would not want to be Rita or her has shown the correct use of pronouns. If in case of a male character, just for example, "<span>Jane or him," instead of saying that as "Jane or his."</span>
Answer:
1: Traffic was moving at a snail's pace.
Explanation:
An Idiom is like a phrase:
It's raining cats and dogs out there.
"Raining cats and dogs" is the idiom, as with this answer, it's, "moving at a snail's pace"
Entertainment would be the answer
Answer:
A). I was/am the only daughter and only a daughter. Being an only daughter in a family of six sons forced me by circumstance to spend a lot of time by myself because my brothers felt it beneath them to play with a girl in public. <u>She believes that she may not be considered as valuable as a son.</u>
Explanation:
As per the question, option A displays the inference that would be most appropriately supported by the given passage as it reveals the idea that not only surrounds the entire passage but also unifies it. The descriptions like 'being an only daughter...forced me by circumstance to spend time by myself' and 'my brothers felt it beneath them to play with a girl in public' makes the readers deduce that the authoress probably had a belief that she would not be regarded as of similar value and position as of a son. Thus, <u>option A</u> is the correct answer.