Concept:Grignard reagents are strong bases that remove an acidic proton from amines to produce hydrocarbons.Explanation:In the reaction, the Grignard reagent (RMgX) abstracts a proton from the amine's N–H group. This yields a hydrocarbon (R–H) and a magnesium amide salt. The process is an acid‑base reaction where the amine donates its acidic proton. The hydrocarbon formed is the alkane corresponding to the alkyl group of the Grignard reagent.
Answer:The product is the corresponding hydrocarbon (alkane). The correct option is the one showing the hydrocarbon structure.