Success by Ralph Waldo Emerson is about what he thinks success is TRULY defined by
The answer to this question had a solution in which is Breakfeast and bed
A slimy blue thing was in my room.
I grabbed my cat, and looked down at my mat. It was so hard to sleep, so I got up and treaded on my feet. The creature was odd looking. It looked like a pile of pigs mud, but even more gooey and liquidized. This was the weirdest thing I have ever seen in my life. Then, my cat splashed the monster, so I went and reached to turn on my light. I felt silly for having a fright, for it was just my slime that my cat spilled water that made me feel grime.
According to the rules of subject-verb agreement, phrases or clauses between the subject and the verb do not change the NUMBER
The answer is letter D. William Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 has a structure of fourteen <span>lines in an iambic pentameter with a </span>rhymed<span> couplet at the end. It has a rhyme scheme of abab cdcd efef gg. The first two lines rhyme with the third and fourth lines. The fifth and the sixth lines also rhyme with seventh and eighth lines, so as the ninth and tenth lines with the eleventh and twelfth lines. The thirteenth line rhymes with the fourteenth line, making them a rhymed couplet. </span>