Liz shouted for everyone to leave the building and "Liz shouted for everyone to leave the building."
(Can you choose two?)
Number one isn't correct, because even if someone was saying Liz shouted for everyone to leave the building, the period should be inside the quotations, not outside, so that one's incorrect either way.
The next one, it should be Liz shouted for, "everyone to leave the building." So the comma is in the wrong place for that one.
Electoral college votes. A recent example of this is the 2016 US election, where Clinton won the popular vote, while Trump won the electoral college votes by a landslide. Since electoral college votes are what really count, Trump won.
I know one of them is “a focus on chivalry”
This is a SIMILE - if words such as 'as' or 'like' are used in order to compare two things (in this case, 'giant rocks with razor edges crouch LIKE a sea monster with wide open jaws'), then it is a simile.
Choice C.questioning definitions of the people