Answer: the boy sat in the chair and ate a banana
Explanation:
Answer: To show the difference between an educated, refined noble class and coarse, crude commoners. However, this doesn't mean that Shakespeare resented the commoners. It was a self-explanatory fact that the nobles and educated were refined enough to use iambic pentameter in talking to each other - but this has many exceptions too; there are many moments in his plays when the nobles use prose or blank verse, for example when they are chatting to each other or are intoxicated. However, Shakespeare's blank verse and prose, though devoid of contemporary poetic mannerisms, are extremely witty and rich in meaning and associations.
Thoreau begins Civil Disobedience by saying that he agrees with the motto, "That government is best which governs least." Indeed, he says, men will someday be able to have a government that does not govern at all. As it is, government rarely proves useful or efficient.
Answer:
The general statement about the Movement that is most likely true is:
D) All of the participants in the march were deeply inspired by the Movement.
Explanation:
We are basing our answer on the excerpt provided in the question. The excerpt does not give us enough information to know if everyone had their parents permission, or if they all belonged to that same church, much less if they were all crying tears of joy. It does, however, induce us to believe all the participants were deeply inspired by the movement. According to the narrator, they were not only very organized, but they knew what was going to happen. They knew they would be arrested, but they felt so inspired with courage that they kept on coming, defying the authorities. As the narrator says, "The ... Movement was moving forward. It was just overwhelming."
Answer: Miss Havisham is an eccentric old lady who is always dressed in her wedding dress. She is described as being "faded" - everything about her is old and decaying. Her hair is white and wreathed with wilted flowers, and her clothing hangs on her withered body and is stained and yellowed with age. Mrs. Havisham had once planned to be married, but she was jilted at the altar, and she has left everything in her house exactly...
Explanation: