The way that William Butler Yeat's poem "From the Antigone" is parallel to Sophocle's Antigone is the speaker in the poem, as well as the chorus in the play, lament noble Antigon'e terrible fate. The poem only speaks about a woman who is dying. This woman is most likely Antigone. None of the other statements are mentioned in the poem. The correct answer is A.
Answer:
B). Mister Toussaint tried the microwave, and even the cleverest squeezy-pouch couldn’t survive a good nuking.
Explanation:
The most adequate way to combine the two given sentence would be 'Mister Toussaint tried the microwave, and even the cleverest squeezy-pouch couldn’t survive a good nuking' as it correctly employs the conjunction to link the two clauses and connotes aptly that the latter action('cleverest squeezy...nuking') was surprising. The other options either jumble up the meaning of the sentence(option A) or grammtically incorrect due to associating with incorrect conjunctions('yet' in option C and 'for' in option D). Thus, <u>option B</u> is the correct answer.
The outline should include a complete bio of each editorial in addition to the points you are comparing and cantrasting. Why you chose these two articles. I.e. (how the two articles will help and or support you with your original argument). Good Luck
Answer:
They will resume their marriage, and they will happily rule together over their kingdom.
Explanation:
I found it on quizlet.
I don't know the excerpts