English, asked by mailtokamal1507, 1 year ago

Read the passage from "Two Kinds.”


And I started to play. It was so beautiful. I was so caught up in how lovely I looked that at first I didn’t worry how I would sound. So it was a surprise to me when I hit the first wrong note and I realized something didn’t sound quite right. And then I hit another and another followed that. A chill started at the top of my head and began to trickle down. Yet I couldn’t stop playing, as though my hands were bewitched. I kept thinking my fingers would adjust themselves back, like a train switching to the right track. I played this strange jumble through two repeats, the sour notes staying with me all the way to the end.


How is this passage an example of an internal conflict?


A. It describes the narrator’s inability to stop playing when she wants to do so.

B. It describes the narrator’s unexpected enjoyment of performing in front of an audience.

C. It describes the narrator’s thoughts and fe

Answers

Answered by sunilakula
1
I guess the answer is a

ShaybbR: This answer is incorrect but im not sure what the right one is on Edgenuity
Answered by Arslankincsem
5

The passage is an example of an internal conflict.


(B) It describes the narrator’s unexpected enjoyment of performing in front of an audience.


The writer wanted to play the piano with all her proficiency but she was assuming that nothing is going exactly as accurate as it ought to be.


Her fingers were running but every time she was suspecting that control is getting lost.

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