I think it's C.
Because, lemme put commas on each sentences....
(1) If you ask me, Jerry is a tennis whiz.
<span>(2) When she is worried, Lucille eats a lot. </span>
<span>(3) Jerry loves tennis, he plays everyday. </span>
<span>(4) Lucille bought a new tennis racket and brought it home. << Where should I put it?
</span>
So, (4) is automatically out of question. (1) and (2) seems okay with comma, but (3) is a little bit weird. (3) supposed to have 'and' in the middle, but it's not there. So, you can put semicolon there, to separate the words.
Hey we just read that too! How Mr. Frank says "no more" because he can't bare to remember his horrid past by reading his diary. In the first scene, he finds the diary and starts reading it. In scene 5, Mr. Frank finishes the book.
B. To develop a character or characters - APEX
Ricochet is the rebound that happens when you fire a gun at an object that deflects the bullet. In other words, fire all you want at Sia because anything negative will just be deflected.
Lyrically, Sia’s referring to the criticism and negativity that’s directed at her – the bullets – but she won’t be affected at all. She’s strong and immune to it like titanium is to bullets.
Hope this helps.
Answer:
actual malice, because Joan is a limited-purpose public figure as she voluntarily thrust herself into a public controversy
Explanation:
In law, actual malice is simply a requirement that is imposed on a particular person who claims her image is being tarnished by someone when filing a lawsuit for slander or libel. This will be found in a case where the defendant actually publishes a false statement (libel) or communicates it (slander), knowing fully well that the information is false and disregard for what such information can cause. Joan is actually a limited-purpose figure and decided to go public by making efforts to get her voice out there in a quest to build more bike lanes.