In question 9, you didn't provide any information about daughter cells, so I'm not sure which cells you are referring to. However, in general, if each daughter cell undergoes meiosis, the total number of daughter cells will depend on how many daughter cells there were to begin with.
If there were two daughter cells to begin with, and each of them undergoes meiosis, then there will be a total of four daughter cells. Each of the original daughter cells will divide into two haploid daughter cells, resulting in a total of four haploid daughter cells.
If there were four daughter cells to begin with, and each of them undergoes meiosis, then there will be a total of eight daughter cells. Again, each of the original daughter cells will divide into two haploid daughter cells, resulting in a total of eight haploid daughter cells.
The number of daughter cells will double each time meiosis occurs, so it's important to know how many daughter cells there were to begin with in order to determine the total number of daughter cells that will result from multiple rounds of meiosis.