The correct answer is A.
Le Chatelier's principle: if a system is disturbed, the system's position of equilibrium will shift to partially counteract the imposed change, causing a new equilibrium to be established.
During titration, water is formed by the acid-base reaction causing H+ concentration to decrease and by Le Chatelier's principle, this will cause citric acid to further dissociate.
Dissociation of Citric Acid: C6H8O7 <--> 3H+ + C6H5O7 3- [All states aqueous]
Acid Base Reaction: H+ + OH- --> H2O [All ions are aqueous, water is liquid]
From the second equation, H+ concentration is decreasing due to the reaction, this causes H+ to decrease in the first equation and because it is an equilibrium system, it will favour the forward reaction as according to Le Chatelier's principle to oppose the imposed change.
In short, for titration questions, it's about the number of moles a single acid can produce (mono-, di- and triprotic), not its strength.
i think in hsc coarse we assume that it ionises fully. thats why sometimes we get questions to calculate its ph from its concentration...
Only for calculation questions such as determining pH.