This question is based on General Literature Principles and Literary Appreciation
'She certainly doesn't want to play
Other Woman in some conventional, boring triangle. She doesn't feel like an other Woman; she isn't weedling or devious, she doesn't wear negligees or paint her toe nails. William may think she's exotic but she isn't really; she's straightforward, narrow and unadomed, a scientist; not of web-spinner, expert at the entrapment of husbands.
Life before Man by Margaret Atwood
According to the passage, the 'Other Woman' by definition is

a

beautiful and vivacious

b

dishonest and deceitful and

c

careless and dowdy

d

manipulative and predatory

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Explanation

Correct Option
b

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olacot
2 months ago

The correct answer is D. manipulative and predatory.

Explanation
According to the passage from Margaret Atwood's Life Before Man, the character defines the "conventional" Other Woman through a series of negative traits that she believes she does not possess.

Manipulative: The passage describes the "Other Woman" as being "wheedling or devious" and an "expert at the entrapment of husbands." This implies a calculated, dishonest way of handling people to get what she wants.

Predatory: The metaphor "web-spinner" used to describe the Other Woman directly evokes the image of a predator (like a spider) catching its prey.

Why the other options are incorrect
❌ A. Beautiful and vivacious: While "exotic" is mentioned, the passage focuses more on the behavioral expectations (deviousness, wearing negligees) rather than positive traits like vivacity.

❌ B. Dishonest and deceitful: While these are close, "deceitful" is just one part of the description. Option D is a more comprehensive answer because it includes the "entrapment" and "web-spinning" aspects highlighted in the text.

❌ C. Careless and dowdy: The text states the protagonist is "unadorned," which might seem "dowdy" to some, but the "Other Woman" she is being compared to is the opposite—someone who wears negligees and paints her toenails.

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