Out of all the pronouns, "whom" makes the most sense grammatically. This allows us to narrow it down to A or D.
In order for it to be the object of a preposition, there would have to be a preposition in front of it. "For," however is <em>not</em> a preposition. In fact, there isn't a preposition in the whole question.
This leaves us with option D, which is the correct answer.
You can better tell it's a direct object if you flip the sentence around a bit.
Your sister is waiting <em>for whom</em>?
"Whom" is essentially receiving the action. "Whom" is what your sister is waiting for.
Answer: D. whom; direct object.
<u>Answer:</u>
The two sentences that summarize the passage are
- <em>Miss Brill spends every Sunday morning at the park observing the interactions among the people who are there. </em>
- <em>Out of the goodness of her heart, Miss Brill reads the newspaper to an elderly man who cannot see well. </em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
The above-mentioned sentences summarise the passage and narrates a small story. Miss Brill, a kind-hearted woman visits a visits the park on every Sunday in the morning. She observes how the people in the interact with each other. There she finds a old man with blur vision. She helps him by reading newspaper for him .This emphasises the good natures of Miss Brill.
The proffesor will grade her paper by evaluating the criteria as listed on the rubric.
Answer:
She wishes she knew what happened to the ring.
Explanation:
She said the wishes that she could help them but she was busy taking care of her kids.