Handel is to knife as hilt is to sword
Answer:
iambic pentameter" (also called "blank verse")
Explanation:
What is the central irony used to support the satire in the passage? The king prefers a pretentious son to his more sensible siblings. The king finds great value in a son who has little sense. The king is unable to see that Shadwell is really a poor choice. The king believes that maturity will build more sense in his son. Done Mac Flecknoe by John Dryden (excerpt) All humane things are subiect to decay, And when Fate Summons, Monarch's must obey; This Flecknoe found, who like Augustus young, Was call'd to Empire, and had Govern'd long; In Prose and Ver
1st one is the correct answer
Born circa 1341 B.C.E., King Tut was the 12th king of the 18th Egyptian dynasty.