I think that it is definitely We. <span />
Just took answered on Apex, its C) The colonists should separate from great Britain and create their own government.
Answer:
Vera, Saki's mischievious protagonist, is indeed a dynamic, or round, character who exhibits several traits. For one thing, she is a perspicacious young lady who is able to identify people's vulnerabilities and seize upon details surrounding her in order to weave a convincing tale that will deceive her audience. She, also, can quickly adapt her fabrications to the next person or situation as her spontaneous response to Mrs. Stappleton's inquiry about Nuttel's bizarre reaction when she has announced the return of her family. Certainly, Vera enjoys exploiting the weaknesses in others with her subtle and clever practical jokes.
Framton Nuttel is the nervous, insecure type. He worries about Mrs. Sappleton's reception of him when he is introduced, and he is uncomfortable throughout the telling of Vera's tale.
Explanation:
I asked my teacher and she said it is correct
A. I guess that the character from The Importance of Being Earnest that resembles Wilde most would be Algernon.
He is flamboyant, and a party-maniac, and loves to make fun of other people who are not like him. Wilde was like that in his real life too - he was a Victorian man but completely against that period, and he loved to express himself in a manner that would often weird out other people. Algernon is Wilde's voice in the play - he comments on other characters and criticizes them for their exaggerated Victorian values that Wilde hated with a passion.
B. Verbal irony is a sarcastic way of saying opposite of what you actually mean. Dramatic irony is when the readers know something that the characters in the play are unaware of. Situational irony occurs when expectations of what is going to happen and what actually happens do not match.
As for the examples, I don't have the play on me, just use these definitions and find them for yourself. :)