Answer: I think the answer is A but I could be wrong
Explanation: I hope this helps!
Answer:Alice is reasonable, well-trained, and polite. From the start, she is a miniature, middle-class Victorian "lady." Considered in this way, she is the perfect foil, or counterpoint, or contrast, for all the unsocial, bad-mannered eccentrics whom she meets in Wonderland. Alice's constant resource and strength is her courage. Time and again, her dignity, her directness, her conscientiousness, and her art of conversation all fail her. But when the chips are down, Alice reveals something to the Queen of Hearts — that is: spunk! Indeed, Alice has all the Victorian virtues, including a quaint capacity for rationalization; yet it is Alice's common sense that makes the quarrelsome Wonderland creatures seem awkward in spite of what they consider to be their "adult" identities.
Answer:
1). Literature <u>can be classified</u> into four main kinds.
2). The institute supported his efforts in the search for a <u>problem</u>.
Explanation:
The first sentence has been converted into the passive voice by substituting the subject 'we' with the object 'Literature' in order to shift the emphasis from the former to the latter and the verb. The antonym of 'solution' i.e. 'problem' has been employed in the second sentence as per the requirement. It means straightly the opposite of the 'problem.'