The answer is a, ababcdcd
I'm not sure what your options are so heres this. Hope it helps :)
Here is a brief summary:
Arronax is moved by Nemo's fervor as he speaks about the name Avenger. Arronax recognizes that Nemo's presence in the water was caused by "wrath, either hideous or glorious." For the time being, Arronax promises us that he will soon find the source of Nemo's rage, but he is distracted by a faint booming sound. He climbs to the platform, where Ned and Conseil are already standing, and looks out towards the ship Arronax in the distance, which he had seen earlier. The boys notice that it's a battleship, but they can't tell whose nation it belongs to because there isn't a flag visible anywhere.
Answer:
actual malice, because Joan is a limited-purpose public figure as she voluntarily thrust herself into a public controversy
Explanation:
In law, actual malice is simply a requirement that is imposed on a particular person who claims her image is being tarnished by someone when filing a lawsuit for slander or libel. This will be found in a case where the defendant actually publishes a false statement (libel) or communicates it (slander), knowing fully well that the information is false and disregard for what such information can cause. Joan is actually a limited-purpose figure and decided to go public by making efforts to get her voice out there in a quest to build more bike lanes.
Answer:
A). "And to speak truth of Caesar, / I have not known when his affections swayed / More than his reason."
D). “And since the quarrel / Will bear no colour for the thing he is”
E). “And therefore think him as a serpent’s egg / Which, hatched, would as his kind grow mischievous, / And kill him in the shell.”
Explanation:
In the given excerpt from Julius Caesar, the options A, D, and E(as mentioned above) reveals as well as supports the idea that Brutus found it necessary to kill Caesar before he could become dangerous for any one. <u>The first quotation('And to....reason') reveals that Brutus had no idea when Caesar transforms into an emotional being from a rational and responsible man</u>('affections sway his reason'). The next quote('And since..he is') discloses that Brutus considered <u>Caesar to be incapable of handling power sensibly once he acquires it.</u> The third quotation('and therefore...shell') reveals the final support to Brutus view that <u>he would become like a 'serpent's egg' after attaining power and become more harmful and threatening</u> . Thus, he must be killed before that and hence, <u>options A, D, and E</u> are the correct answers.