Answer:
C. She will speak highly of him when she returns to heaven.
Explanation:
Dante Alighieri's "The Divine Comedy" is about a man's journey to the underworld, experiencing hell and heaven. And through the journey of Dante, the readers are able to get a glimpse of what it must be like to suffer eternal dam nation.
In "Inferno", Dante was guided was Virgil <em>"in his path along the lonely hillside"</em>, as asked by Beatrice, a former lover of Dante. And <u>when Virgil promised to help Beatrice in guiding Dante, Beatrice promised to 'put in a good word' when she gets back to heaven.
</u>
Thus, the correct answer is option C.
I would say the correct answer is B. immoral.
The word impious means that you aren't showing respect to God, the respect he deserves. So when you are impious, it means you are disrespectful towards God, meaning you are acting in an immoral way, because God is the epitome of morality and everything good.
First off, a compound sentence is a sentence that contains at least two independent clauses. That tells us <em><u>C</u></em> is out almost immediately because it has a dependent clause, "After Maria finished dinner". Next, is <em><u>B</u></em>, That's a simple sentence, there's no joining method or comma and it only has one subject and one predicate. D isn't right either, it just about the same as <u><em>B</em></u><em />. Your answer would be <em><u>A. Paolo missed his girlfriend, but he knew she'd be back soon.</u></em><u /><u /> This sentence has a joining clause, and two <em>independent </em>subjects.
Hope this helps,
♥<em>A.W.E.<u>S.W.A.N.</u></em>♥
"the relevance of the idea to your life"
When analyzing or writing a paper about a fictional work, you could analyze the symbolism and/or implications in the piece of fiction. In the academic setting, it simply doesn't matter if ideas conveyed in writing impact your life or not.
The answer is D because an eye rhyme refers to words that look like they should rhyme but sound different. "Thrush" and "Bush" both end with "-ush" but the "u" is pronounced differently.