In "Two Kinds," Suyuan gives her daughter, Jing-Mei, a piano. ... She hopes that Jing-Mei will win an upcoming talent contest but, in fact, she pressures her daughter so much that the pair argue and she never plays the piano in her childhood again.
Unclear question. However, I inferred you are referring to story "Julius Caeser" by Shakespeare.
Answer:
<u>He rejected the proposal initially</u>.
Explanation:
Remember that Cassius was among the conspirators who wanted <em>Caeser</em> dead.
So he tried persuade Brutus to join them in their plot to kill Ceaser. However, after the conversation Brutus wasn't affected to join them at that moment.
Transitions which introduce a new idea are called additive transitions.
<em>Additive</em> is the adjective form of the noun <em>addition</em>, which comes from Latin <em>additio</em>: <em>addere</em> (add) + the suffix <em>-tio</em> (the act of).
By using additive tansitions, you can either put in new elements which strenghten, specify, or continue your argument, or you can present entirely new ideas.
Examples include:
- <em>similarly </em>or <em>likewise</em> to introduce a comparable element;
- <em>what's more</em>, <em>besides</em>, <em>in addition</em>, <em>moreover</em>, or <em>furthermore </em>to introduce a different piece of information going in the same direction as your point;
- <em>namely </em>or <em>specifically </em>to introduce a precision regarding something you've already stated.
I believe it is B, because of ran, a verb representing an action.
An adjective phrase is a group of words that describe something.
So since "of redwood trees" describes what we would see by the scenic loop, our answer would be C.
Final answer: C. of redwood trees