I think the answer is acceptance
Answer:
B. A, B, C
Explanation:
Coordinate headings assume using the same type of marking for starting a new chapter. Those can be Arabic or Roman numerals, uppercase and lowercase numerals, cardinal and ordinal numbers, but the author should always use just one of them, not a mixture.
Only in the answer B we find such a marking with using uppercase letters A, B and C.
On the other three answers we have a mixture of Arabic and Roman numerals, uppercase and lowercase letters.
Speare has been more feted in print than ever, in the mainstream as well as in the overflowing and sometimes murky underground river of academic publications. "Enough!" we may well cry (as we sometimes cry at the unending proliferation of productions of the plays). Not, however, in the case of Sir Frank Kermode, whose profoundly conceived and elegantly executed Shakespeare's Language (2000) was a complex but luminous contribution to the understanding of the greatest single body of dramatic work in any language, one of the most refreshing in recent times; any new commentary from him on the subject is eagerly awaited. Despite a brief flirtation with structuralism, he is no grand theorist. Instead, he is that rather old-fashioned phenomenon: a
Punctuation and no run on sentences Hope this helps