The persona in "To His Coy Mistress" is basically a guy coaxing his lady love to "do it" with him using arguments of time and mortality. While this concept of convincing a woman to "give it up" is timeless, in this poem it is rather clear how the persona sees women as objects for pleasure. His persuasion, while flowing with cadence, reeks of machismo typical of predominantly patriarchal age.
B/ Device is your answer.
Answer:
Just because man. He a pe.do
Explanation:
<span>The sentence which does not contain any errors in comma usage is:
</span><span>A. You realize, needless to say, that we both plan to audition for the same part.
</span><span>
Comma is used to separate the phrases which convey different ideas and represent the dependent and independent clauses.
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