Hi
@br2pi5 -
Yes, as
@PhilzCoffeeAddict points out, you need information from the passage or question to figure this out, and they don't give you any such information in the passage either, which is why the correct answer is D. The information they give you could be relatively explicit or relatively implicit -- for instance, if you can pick up on a pattern where males are much more likely to be affected than females (although this doesn't necessarily mean that
all males are affected), it's likely that you're dealing with an X-linked trait.
In general, when determining modes of inheritance, there are two quick questions you need to ask: (1) does a trait skip generations? (if yes, it must be recessive; if not, it is likely to be dominant [although recessive traits can manifest in multiple consecutive generations too, depending on the parental genotypes and random chance]) and (2) are males disproportionately more affected than females? (if so, the trait is X-linked, and likely to be X-linked recessive -- X-linked dominant is a theoretical possibility, but it has some slightly distinct inheritance trends).
Hope this helps!!