Question 2: To be a L-B A/B reaction, there must be a transfer of one proton from the L-B acid to the L-B base.
In A, the ammonium ion transfers 1 proton to the amide ion.
In C, the perchloric acid transfers 1 proton to the acetic acid.
In D, the methylammonium cation transfers 1 proton to the ethoxide ion.
There is no 1 proton transfer in B.
Question 6: Strength is not a factor in the neutralisation, only the concentrations and volumes of the acid and base and the stoichiometry. As you noted, phosphoric acid is triprotic whereas all the others are monoprotic.
Question 8: The pKa values tell you that chlorous acid is stronger than nitrous acid. It follows that the chlorite ion (pKb = 12.04) must be a weaker base than the nitrite ion (pKb = 10.61). So, for equal concentrations, we can compare the pH's directly:
pH (chlorous acid) < pH (nitrous acid) < pH (chlorite salt) < pH (nitrite salt)
And, given we have the concentrations are all 0.1 M, we can even calculate the pH values:
pH (chlorous acid) = 1.48 < pH (nitrous acid) = 2.195 < pH (chlorite salt) = 7.48 < pH (nitrite salt) = 8.195