I personally would choose D, because if you chart it out, you could weigh both sides and see things clearly.
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is option B. The narrator allude the to the possibility of requiring a wife who could match Adams social standards at the end of the sentence from Mark Twain's "The 1,000,000 Bank-Note". Hope this answers the question.
Answer:
MAKE NO CHANGE
Explanation:
There is nothing wrong with the punctuation of the sentence we are analyzing here. First, let's take a look at the colon. When we need to introduce a long list of items, a colon should be used right before the list begins. That is exactly what we have here. The speaker placed a colon before listing the locations to be visited.
Now, we can usually separate the items in a list with commas. However, in this case, not only do we have long names for each location, but we also have the "location of the location". That is, a certain museum is located in a certain city, and to separate the name of the museum from the name of the city, we must use a comma already. For that reason, when we name another location, a different one, we should use a semicolon instead of a comma.
Answer:
The second missed out full stop at end.
The third answer is wrong as however is in lower case.
The fourth is as well as wrong the however is in lower case.
The last missed out full stop.
So, the first is correct as however dont really nessasarily need comma.