Answer: transcendentalist
Explanation:
I did the test :)
'I can't believe you didn't call me.' This is an example of a <u>declarative</u> sentence.
Explanation:
A declarative sentence can be defined as one that simply makes or expresses a direct statement, in the present tense. It is a simple statement that ends with a full stop, like the one given in the above example.
An interrogative sentence is a question and ends with a question mark (e.g. <em>Did you go to work today?</em>).
An imperative sentence is one that presents requests or commands someone to do something and ends with a period/full stop (e.g. <em>Open the door.</em>)
An exclamatory sentence expresses strong emotions and ends with an exclamation point (e.g. <em>That thunderstorm was scary!</em>).
Answer:
The poem will live on for all to read.
Explanation:
This question refers to Sonnet XVIII by William Shakespeare. In this sonnet, the author compares the subject of the poem to a summer's day. However, he argues that the speaker is even better, and lists the reasons why this is the case. The speaker also tells us that, while everything in nature fades, the subject will not, as the poem will live on forever and she will live through these lines.