In Browning's poem, "My Last Duchess," the Duke was married to his lovely wife, the Duchess, whose painting he has on the wall of his castle and is showing it to a visitor. As we read the poem, we find out that the Duchess liked to flirt a lot with other men which is why the Duke had her killed. I'm not sure who Browning seems to sympathize with - I guess <u>the Duchess</u>, given that she was murdered. The Duke is not the one who should be sympathized with.
Answer:
my daughter
Explanation:
I think I'm correct. but I don't know
Answer: B. I love to eat chocolate covered pretzels.
Explanation: A hyphen is a punctuation mark with various uses in english, like separate syllables and join words. In the given sentences, the one that needs a hyphen is option b, "I love to eat chocolate covered pretzels", it should be: "I love to eat chocolate-covered pretzels, without the hyphen we can't tell if they are referring to chocolate pretzels that are covered, of pretzels that are covered with chocolate.
Hey there
Being the bolded verb loved, it is conjugated in the in the preterite of the indicative mood.
The indicative is the mood of the real life; it makes a statement or asks a question, and the preterite is the time of actions that already happened. In this case, the verb is showing something that happened in real life, real feelings and in the past.
Hope this helps
I would say no because a simile is having something referred to something else for example as brace as a lion or crazy like a fox.