Answer:
C. re-read the passage and reference it while re-writing the passage in your own words
Explanation:
In paraphrasing you should use your own words while still understanding what the passage is saying. You paraphrasing should be the same understanding, just different words.
Hope this made sense.
We think that West Indian Archie was probably such a bad-mother-shut-your-mouth that he would've scared Shaft. We mean, they called him one of the Four Horsemen a.k.a. the guys that bring about the end of the world. He's not someone you mess with.
So we're pretty sure when this scene happens, Malcolm isn't thinking that he's going to be a mentor: there is the answer
Themes? Or what are you trying to say here
That novel is a parody of a knighthood which was long forgotten. Don Quixote reads chivalric books instead of being the knight himself. He becomes sort of mad - he sees dragons and enemies where there are only windmills. He thinks his love Dulcinea will never age and will forever wait for him - whereas in reality she is just a normal peasant who doesn't even know him. The values of knighthood are mocked in this novel, and that is what makes it a parody.