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Part A

What inference can be drawn from "President Cleveland, Where Are You?"


Roger becomes a closer friend to Rollie than Jerry.

Armand's romantic problems make him lose his appetite.

Jerry feels pleased by his decision to give Armand money.

Jerry prefers spending time alone over being with friends.
Part B

Which detail from the story best supports the answer in Part A?


"His mood of dejection mirrored my own, and I sat down beside him. We did not say anything for a while."

"I did not divulge his secret and often shared his agony, particularly when he sat at the supper table and left my mother's special butterscotch pie untouched."

"'Jeez, why did he have to be the one to get a Grover Cleveland? You should see him showing off.'"

"I was puzzled by my lethargy. Wasn't spring supposed to make everything bright and gay?"

User Nsdel
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2 Answers

8 votes

Answer:

Part A: Armand's romantic problems make him lose his appetite.

Part B: "I did not divulge his secret and often shared his agony, particularly when he sat at the supper table and left my mother's special butterscotch pie untouched."

Explanation: I just took the test, it's correct

User Joan Lara
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4 votes

Answer:

Part A: Armand's romantic problems make him lose his appetite.

Part B: "I did not divulge his secret and often shared his agony, particularly when he sat at the supper table and left my mother's special butterscotch pie untouched."

Step-by-step explanation:

I took the k-12 test and got 100%!

User Nathan Russell
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3.9k points