Answer:
B, unsure about the new experience.
Explanation:
if you look in the writing, you can see key sentences that had a hint of worry and hesitation to them. for example "pressed for time, I finally decided it was safe enough to try."
Answer:
Explanation:
I look around frantically, trying to find a way around the traffic but there's no hope. Each car is bumper to bumper. All I can think about is how much it'll cost me if I miss this meeting. I can't believe this is happening! I hope my boss will make an exception. I woke up early and planned my time accordingly but I'm still going to be late.
Answer:
"But he'd said, ‘I'll call you.' That's what he said—‘I'll call you.'"
Explanation:
<em>Sixteen </em>is a short story written by Maureen Daly, an Irish-born American writer best known for the works she wrote while she was still in her teens. <em>Sixteen </em>is one of these works. She wrote it when she was sixteen years old.
The story tells about a girl who meets a boy at the skating rink and begins to like him. The line <em>But he'd said, ‘I'll call you.' That's what he said—‘I'll call you.' </em>follows their separation. The narrator hopes the boy will call her and convinces herself that he will do so. However, soon we find out that the boy didn't call. This is how the story ends.
#7 is the second one : they are antonyms
Its a metaphor :) the kids room is being compared to the disaster area to make the point that it is messy