<span>the word that the appositive renames or further identifies - agent</span>
Answer:
- "I love to hear her speak
''
- "And yet by heaven, I think my love as rare
Explanation:
The speaker in this sonnet acknowledges that his mistress does not have heavenly qualities that make her overly attractive but he still has a rare love for her that enables him to love hearing her speak even though music has a more pleasing sound.
This shows that the sonnet is of a serious tone with the speaker truly loving his mistress regardless of qualities that she possesses which he does not believe are attractive.
The infinitive is the base form of a verb that has no inflection binding it to a particular subject or tense. Some examples are <em>to think, to be, to see</em>. The infinitive verbs of the sentences are in bold:
2. I'm working <u>to save up</u> for some new music.
4. Denise likes <u>to get</u> her exercise by dancing
5. Dave has <u>to walk </u>the dog every morning.
Sentences number 1 and 3 do not contain an infinitive. The use of the preposition "to" here expresses motion or direction toward a point, person, place, or thing.
Answer:
THE character does something genuinely surprising to the reader
Explanation: