"harmful effects .... do not end with the smoker"
"Including children"
"even brief exposure"
"serious disease and death"
"more frequent and severe asthma attacks in children"
These all have slight exaggerations, along with references to children, in an attempt to evoke more emotion in the reader.
Answer:
I think
C) “Loser”: Everything felt blank and quiet
Explanation:
In question 39!
you have 2 words to chose from!
Technically really and real are the "same word" but English is tough.. so we switch the meaning.
really could be used as a form of very.
and real could be used as a form of true.
Answer :
The theme of "A Complication or Two" is that chance results in greater fortune than careful planning.
The narrator carefully constructs this theme throughout the story. The narrator had made a grand ten year plan for his future education, starting from an Ivy League School of choice to a Law School. However, fate had other plans for him and the role of fate started when he received his rejection letter from his preferred Ivy League School. He opted for some more volunteer service at Tri-Valley Hospital where he met his future university mate and wife, Alma . Coincidentally, he also landed a residency at Tri-Valley Hospital after clearing medical school. If he had received an acceptance letter from his parents' alma mater he would not have opted for more volunteering service and would not have met his wife of thirty years or landed the residency at Tri-Valley Hospital.
The following lines from "A Complication or Two" describe the role chance or fate plays in life :
"Looking back, I suppose my life started with that letter. I don’t think everything necessarily happens for a reason—there’s too much tragedy in the world for that. But there’s no doubt that some misfortunes turn into pivotal moments that can alter the course of a person’s life for the better. Alma and I have been together for 30 years now, and I still wonder what that other life—the one in which my letter said “congratulations”—might look like. I expect it would have been pretty grand, full of its own triumphs and pitfalls. "