It depends on the challenge. If the challenge made them feel good, it could boost confidence, change their personality, and they might also change the ways they do things because they found one way was better than the other. If it made them feel bad, they might start to act distant, be less active
Answer:
It may be, "matter of fact but impressed"
Explanation:
After reading, note that the writer is giving the reader facts but, at the same time, praising the subject they are talking about. The answer choice, "matter of fact but impressed," best represents this.
I believe that D would be the answer, since it is worded most formally and in a complex manner.
<span>As for me, the third option C)I have always been accused of taking the things I love - football, of course, but also books and records - much too seriously, and I do feel a kind of anger when I hear a bad record, or when someone is lukewarm about a book that means a lot to me.) looks the most suitable and directly shows that the author learned to have high expectations in life only after he went to a
football game. And I suppose <span>A)I'd been to public entertainments before, of course; I'd been to the cinema and the pantomime and to see my mother sing in the chorus of the White Horse Inn at the Town Hall.</span></span>