First you must know what the word "bravado" means:
It is essentially another word for self-confident. One with a lot of bravado can also be considered a show-off or arrogant.
Looking at the choices the only choice that is "showing-off" something is choice B. Large diamond pendent
This could come off to others as someone who is proud of their riches or wants the world to know their wealth.
Hope this helped!
~Just a girl in love with Shawn Mendes
The people and their interactions in the text includes how people wanted to squash their cultural identity but still had differences crammed in their backpacks.
<h3>What is the interaction between people and ideas in the text?</h3>
It follows from textual evidence that;
- As much as I tried to squash my cultural identity, my peers were curious, often asking questions revolved around the practical — “Why are you vegetarian?” or “What’s a sari?” — to the more personal — “You go to a temple?
On this note, it follows from the text that people initially had cultural differences even though they want to squash their cultural differences.
Read more on textual evidence;
brainly.com/question/25658352
#SPJ1
pine trees
The narrator's neighbor is growing pine trees. The narrator is growing apple trees. In the poem, the narrator says, "He is all pine and I am apple orchard.
The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "third-person omniscient perspective." The narrative style does Jhumpa Lahiri use in her short story “Once in a Lifetime” is that of third-person omniscient perspective<span>
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