Answer:
interrogative and or pronoun
Explanation:
Who (pronoun) The pronoun who, in English, is an interrogative pronoun and a relative pronoun, used chiefly to refer to humans. Its derived forms include whom, an objective form the use of which is now generally confined to formal English; the possessive form whose; and the indefinite form whoever (also whosoever, whom(so)ever
3rd person pov
uses the word “she” and there’s no “I” or “you”
Answer:
2. The strange thoughts that come when our minds are at rest.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's "Romeo and Ju li et" revolves around the tragic love story of two lovers who chose death than being separated. The romantic tragedy focuses on how societal and family pressures often became the obstacle for successful love and how detrimental it can be.
In the given passage from Act I scene iv of the story, Mercutio was describing his dream about<em> "Queen Mab"</em> which Romeo declares nonsense. Then, Mercutio declares that dreams are the<em> "children of an idle brain"</em>, the result of a 'free' mind with nothing to do. According to him, such dreams came out from nothing and are merely "<em>vain fantasy</em>."
Thus, the correct answer is option 2.
The answer you are looking for is c
B, because it is describing the noun,
Hope it helps! :D