Answer:
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Answer:
1. My mum is easy to talk to. Talk to (b) <u>her</u>.
2. My dad's great. You'll love (e) <u>him</u>.
3. We're lost. Can you help (d) <u>us</u>?
4. Listen, I've got something to tell (c) <u>you</u>.
5. Beata has got five dogs. She really loves (a) <u>them</u>.
6. Hey, Jack - I need to talk to (g) <u>you</u>.
7. This is a great CD. What is (f)<u> it</u>?
Explanation:
I have been able to match the sentences to their object pronouns.
Object pronouns are known to be those pronouns that replaces noun in a sentence and are the objects that receive the action in that sentence.
In a sentence, if the object pronouns replace nouns, the nouns they replace cannot be the subject of that sentence. These object pronouns are known to be personal pronouns which are used as grammatical object. They are used as the direct or indirect object of a verb or can be used as the object of a preposition.
Some examples are <em>me, you, him, her, us, it,</em> etc.
Answer: I believe the best answer to be the first option:
The three quatrains satirize common poetic comparisons of one’s beloved to beautiful things, suggesting that the speaker’s feelings are not strong. However, the sudden reversal in tone in the final couplet surprises and moves through its sincerity and depth of feeling, suggesting strong emotions.
Explanation: In his Sonnet 130, Shakespeare uses metaphor to compare his loved one to beautiful natural things. However, he does so only to conclude that the woman he loves is not better than any of those things. Her hair is like black wires, her color is an unbecoming dun, her breath smells bad, her cheeks do not have any color. Still, he loves her. He does not idolize her in any way. He sees her as the human being she is, and his love is not less valuable because of that.
Shakespeare's intention is to mock the poetry that was so in vogue back at his time. In Elizabethan England, poets often used the Petrarch form when writing about love. They would compare their lovely ladies to goddesses and natural beauties, always claiming their women were far more beautiful than any of those things. It's as if their love made them blind to their flaws. Shakespeare skillfully satirizes such custom.
The sentence that best stared the idea that this excerpt helps to develop is women were represented as being strong in literature, but were not allowed power in real life.
<h3>What is A Vindication of the Rights of Woman?</h3>
This is a book by Mary Wollstonecraft. The book deals with the rights of the women, and it says that they deserve the same education as men. The women in literature are show very powerful, but in reality their condition is not very good.
Thus, the correct option is C.
Learn more about A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
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That did not make any sense but I’m only answering this for the points lol