The correct answer I believe is the first choice
hope this helps
The correct answer is the word 'just'.
Adverbs are words or phrases that modify or change the verb, adjective, determiner, noun phrase, sentence or clause they refer to. Adverbs usually express frequency, degree, level of certainty, time, manner or place and answer questions like "in what way?", "to what extent" etc. It is noted by modern linguists that adverbs tend not to fall under any other word category. In this case 'The' and 'a' are determiners; 'king' and 'ruler' are nouns; 'is' is a verb and 'just' is an adverb.
Answer: Appositive: the Scoutmaster. Noun or pronoun renamed: Mr. Murray.
Explanation: a word (other than a pronoun) used to identify any of a class of people, places, or things, or to name a particular one of these. An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that gives more information about other noun or pronoun that precedes it. In the given sentence we can see an example of an appositive phrase in the words "the Scoutmaster" and it is giving more information about the noun "Mr. Murray."
Answer:
He shows up at her house looking for work.
Explanation:
The caravan man is looking for any kind of work that promotes some money for him and when he sees Elisa's house, he believes that there may be some service he can do, so he goes there and keeps asking if Elisa has scissors to sharpen, notes to fix or any other kind of work for him, although she keeps saying that she has nothing for him to do.
The answer is fictional dialogue