Answer:
D: He is repeating what his father used to say.
Explanation:
edg2021
O avoid bantering with one another.
Answer:
The reader can most likely conclude that the narrator and Jean frequently engage in pointless arguments.
Explanation:
The question is not complete since it provides neither the dialogue nor the options to answer it, here is the complete information:
Read the following sentences from "Rhinoceros."
"You're completely lost in a dense alcoholic haze . . ."
"Which rises from the stomach . . ."
"Yes. And has pervaded your brain. What marshy woods can you think of round about here? Our province is so arid they it Little Castile."
"Perhaps it sheltered under a pebble? Perhaps it made its nest on a dry branch?"
"How tiresome you are with your paradoxes. You're quite incapable of talking seriously."
"Today, particularly."
"Today and every other day."
"Don't lose your temper, my dear Jean. We're not going to quarrel about that creature . . ."
We changed the subject of our conversation and began to talk about the weather again, about the rain which fell so rarely in our region, about the need to provide our sky with artificial clouds, and other banal and insoluble questions.
Based on their dialogue, the reader can most likely conclude that the narrator and Jean.
A) avoid bantering with one another.
B) are concerned about each other's health.
C) frequently engage in pointless arguments.
D) become easily irritated with unrealistic notions.
Besides the sentences that open the conversation that seems to be a collection of nonsense terms, the narrator says that they stopped talking about that and talk about their common topics which are not the deepest or more productive topics they could talk about, simple ideas to have a small conversation with each other.
1.) C
Frequently engages in pointless arguments
2.) D
Settings
3.)B
Where are my cousins attend
4.)D
Earrings
5.)B
Subject
Answer:
True.
Not sure if this is a T or F question but to be honest you didn't clarify so I tried.