If i am correct it is either being used as some sort of subject or noun
Answer:
Appositive: the book by E.B. White
Noun or pronoun renamed: Charlotte's We
Explanation:
Appositive/appositive phrase is a noun/a noun phrase that remains another noun or a pronoun. There are two types of appositive phrases: restrictive (provides essential information about the noun it renames) and non-restrictive ( gives us more details about the renamed noun. Another important feature is that non-restrictive appositive phrases are always separated with commas from the rest of the sentence.
So, in this case, our appositive phrase is the book by E.B. White, and the noun it renames is Charlotte's Web. It is separated with commas and gives us more details about the renamed noun which makes it non-restrictive appositive phrase.
a millionaire banker
Walter Mitty performs surgery on a millionaire banker. The fantasy starts with Mitty walking in on a situation where the other doctors are having a hard time with the patient's case. They ask Mitty to take a look at the millionaire. The fantasy ends when Mitty puts on the surgical gloves with the confidence of one who has already succeeded.
You're Spanish, aren't you? i think that would be correct because a semicolon is for when there are 2 complete ideas in a sentence.
A. It shows that Cassius thinks that Brutus is too optimistic.
What Cassius is basically asking Brutus is whether he is willing to be humiliated and be marched through the streets tied up as trophy because this is what usually happened to the defeated. What Cassius is trying to communicate to Brutus is the notion that he should consider the consequences of what were to happen should he happen to fail.