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why does elizabeth feel its impossible for her to be as happy as jane? …

Question

why does elizabeth feel its impossible for her to be as happy as jane?
she says shes older than jane.
she says shes just not meant to be happy.
she doesnt want to be happy.
she says shes not made like jane.
question 9
to whom does elizabeth say, \you dont know what hes really like\ and why?
to her mother so she will stop nagging her about marriage
to herself to convince herself to marry darcy

Explanation:

Response
For the first question (Why does Elizabeth feel it's impossible...):
Brief Explanations

In "Pride and Prejudice", Elizabeth acknowledges that her temperament and disposition differ from Jane's (Jane is more easy - going and optimistic). The option "She says she's not made like Jane" aligns with this as it reflects her recognition of their different natures, while the other options are inconsistent with the text (she is not older than Jane, she doesn't think she's not meant to be happy or not want to be happy).

Answer:

D. She says she's not made like Jane.

For the second question (To whom does Elizabeth say...):

(Assuming the full options are related to "Pride and Prejudice" context, for example, if one of the options is "to Jane about Mr. Bingley (or another character) to explain her view on his true nature", but since the provided options are cut off, a more accurate answer would depend on the complete options. However, based on the novel, a common scenario is Elizabeth saying this to Jane about Mr. Darcy (or another character) to convey that Jane's perception of the character might be incomplete due to Jane's more trusting and less critical nature. If we assume a common option like "to Jane about Mr. Darcy, because Jane has a more favorable and less critical view of people and Elizabeth wants to show her the true nature of Darcy (or the relevant character)" as the correct one, but without full options, we can note the context. )

(If we had full options, we would analyze them. For example, if an option is "to Jane about Mr. Darcy, to tell Jane that she (Elizabeth) sees Darcy's true, more complex nature that Jane might miss due to her kind - hearted and trusting nature", that would be correct. )

Since the second question's options are incomplete, we can only provide the answer for the first question as above, and for the second, more information on options is needed.