“Spring is like a perhaps hand” uses personification and simile. Simile
compares two things with the use of “like” or “as”; while personification gives
human attributes to inanimate objects. In poem's title the simile can be
expressed as "spring is like a hand;" while the personification is giving spring
a “hand” which is a part of the human body that is able to move or arrange things.
The answer is C. If the reader uses “I” he’s specking about himself.
The correct answer here is C. The lines 'If good, why do I yield to that
suggestion Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair And make my seated
heart knock at my ribs, Against the use of nature?' most likely refer to
the theme that things are not always what they seem. This is
illustrated by the fact that the character is negating the fact that
something is good through referring to events that have unsettled them.
Is there more to the question? A passage or something?
Answer:
A)Inductive; Strong
Explanation:
Argument in both logic and philosophy can be regarded as series of statements(premises) which are intends to determine the degree of truth about another statement which is the conclusion. In Inductive reasoning the premises is one that is been reffered to as as evidence giver, though not a complete assurance, of the truth as regards the conclusion