I have no idea where this text is from but B seems like a reasonable answer!
In Irving's "Rip van Winkle," the protagonist falls asleep and then wakes up many years ago, as an old man and sees that everything has changed.
This is an important piece of work for the American mythology - Irving used the method of a short story to convey these myths and legends. The characteristics that are implemented in this story are - it is set in the distant, maybe even non-existent past; strange, exaggerated characters are in it; there is also a positive message about a nation and its people. These characteristics make the reader fall in love with the story faster, and they will forever remember it.
I would say C because you would need to be able to decipher what the work was trying telling you.
Yes, it is B, it is a defining relative clause, notice that without the relative clause the sentence feels empty <em>Only the players are going to get sunburned today. </em>
Defining relative clauses use <em>who/that</em> for people, <em>which/that</em> for things and they are not delimited by commas.
<em>Only the people that/who arrived first can enter.</em>
<em>This the house that/which I used to live in.</em>
Non-defining clauses are just extra comments, optionally they can be removed about the previous noun/pronoun, they are separed by commas and <em>that</em> cannot be used.
<em>Mary,who wears glasses, lives next door.</em>
<em>This country, which was a super power in the past, is still facing amajor economic crisis.</em>
Answer:
Secrets ruin even strong friendships.
Explanation:
According to the excerpt from "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," by Robert Louis Stevenson, Mr Hyde offers to take the potion in front of Dr Lanyon, who accepts the offer. However, Lanyon is so disturbed and horrified that refuses to believe Jekyll's metamorphosis and feels scared to death. In fact, he dies shortly.