This is an excerpt from Sonnet 18 written by Shakespeare. If you know anything about Shakespeare's sonnets, you know that they always have a regular meter, which means that all of them are written in iambic pentameter. This means that the first syllable is unstressed, and it is followed by a stressed syllable.
So, when applied to this poem, just split the words into syllables - the first one will be unstressed (so, as, can, or, can), and the second one will be stressed (long, men, breathe, eyes, see).
(I took the penultimate line as an example)
Answer:
D. It shows that Sari thought the test was easy.
Explanation:
Idioms are expressions with a meaning that isn't deducible from those of the individual words they contain. That is why these phrases should not be taken seriously.
In the given passage, we have an idiom<em> </em><em>a piece of cake. </em>When someone says that something was a piece of cake, they actually mean that something was easy, simple to accomplish. As the test turned out to be easy, Sari was positive that she did well.
Matching is as shown below:
1. pronoun with no specific antecedent - indefinite pronoun
2. determined by function - case
3. consistency between subject and verb or pronoun and antecedent - agreement
4. subject case - nominative
5. clarifies or renames preceding noun - appositive
6. clause with implied subject or verb - elliptical clause
7. adjective phrase without word to modify - dangling construction
8. points out which one - demonstrative pronoun
9. two-word pronoun - reciprocal pronoun
Answer:
The demon zozo, related to the ouija board