So...
A - not conjugated all the way around (there is an sp3 carbon for one of the bridgeheads) - Nonaromatic
B - around the perimeter, 14 electrons, 4n+2 number, Aromatic
C - around the perimeter of the entire system, 8 electrons, 4n number, antiaromatic.
D - can't consider it as a single, cyclic system, so technically nonaromatic.
Each ring is "cross-conjugated" - typically highy reactive, nonaromatic substances. Theoretically, we can draw resonance structures where the central double bond is polarized so that one ring is an aromatic cyclopropenyl cation and the other ring is an antiaromatic cyclopropenyl anion. Being antiaromatic is always more bad than being aromatic is good, so overall....