Question 13: a. Ava: My feed is full of “eat clean” reels, and I feel bad after meals. b. Ava: That sounds fair; I’ll unfollow the size-obse...
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Question 13: a. Ava: My feed is full of “eat clean” reels, and I feel bad after meals. b. Ava: That sounds fair; I’ll unfollow the size-obsessed accounts and focus on energy. c. Ben: I get it, but those clips are edited. Let’s aim for two workouts and one treat meal this week. A. a – c – b B. a – b – c C. b – a – c D. c – a – b Question 14: a. Cara: I know it’s risky, but if we stay down here, our photos will look boring online—do you see a safer spot? c. Liam: Let’s ask the guard about the platform and take turns; that way we get photos without breaking rules. d. Cara: Okay, that sounds better than copying everyone, and we can write a caption about respecting the place. e. Liam: Great—and on the way back, we can pick up any trash nearby to leave it cleaner. A. b – d – e – a – c B. b – a – c – d – e C. c – d – b – a – e D. b – a – d – c – e Question 15: Dear Sam, a. After I reported it with screenshots, the platform removed the account, and my bank blocked transfers. b. It made me realize users must stay careful, yet platforms should protect data and stop fake pages faster. c. Since then, I’ve set two-step verification, used a password manager, and warned my parents in our family chat. d. I felt my heart race, but I checked the official app first, so I didn’t touch the link. e. Yesterday a “delivery staff” called, knew my address, and pushed me to tap a login link. A. b – a – d – c – e B. d – b – a – c – e C. e – d – a – c – b D. b – d – c – a – e Question 16: a. Today, many young adults delay marriage or decide not to marry, even when they have steady relationships. b. Some people support this choice because it reduces money pressure and lets adults build a life they truly want. c. In the end, society can stay connected by respecting choices and building support, not by forcing one timeline. d. High rent, career goals, and the wish for freedom often make that decision feel practical. e. Still, family dinners can turn into uncomfortable questions, and others worry about aging populations and weaker community ties. A. b – a – d – e – c B. a – b – d – e – c C. b – d – e – a – c D. a – d – b – e – c Question 17: a. That is why many people argue for strict fines, rapid takedowns, and meaningful legal punishment for acts such as doxxing, hate speech, targeted harassment, and direct online threats. b. At the same time, if the rules are written too vaguely or enforced too broadly, even sharp criticism may be treated as “hate,” and the law itself can become a weapon used to silence weaker or unpopular voices. c. With clear standards like these in place, victims can receive real protection, public debate can remain possible, and the internet may begin to feel less like a shouting room and more like a shared civic space. d. When a single cruel post can follow a person into school, work, friendships, and family life, the advice to “just ignore it” no longer sounds practical or fair. e. A safer approach is to define harmful acts precisely, require evidence before action is taken, allow appeals for disputed cases, and force platforms to explain their decisions in language ordinary users can understand. A. d – b – a – c – e B. d – a – b – c – e C. d – a – c – b – e D. d – a – b – e – c |
