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USATESTPREP k12 HELP ME

How does the author contrast the differing points of view of Carmody and the Doctor? A) The doctor has little worry over Eileen's future prognosis, and her father Carmody is similarly unworried or unconcerned. B) The doctor's lazy indifference to the spread of tuberculosis conflicts with Carmody's serious and deadly fear of the disease. C) Carmody's deep concern for what is best for his daughter--no matter the cost--conflicts with the doctor's desperate attempts to lower costs. D) O'Neill shows Carmody's fear of losing money through several lines of dialogue, setting him in direct contrast with the doctor's expensive prescriptions and sanatorium stay for Eileen.

User Markphd
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2 Answers

21 votes
21 votes

Answer:

c

Step-by-step explanation:

User Banex
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14 votes
14 votes

Answer:

C

Step-by-step explanation:

C) Carmody's deep concern for what is best for his daughter--no matter the cost--conflicts with the doctor's desperate attempts to lower costs.

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k12

User Xgqfrms
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