The answer is character vs character.
Dreary and weary is an adjective
The dead leave falls, is a verb
Very weary is an adverb
I would say the correct answer is <span>C. "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" is one of the best known plays of Tennessee Williams. The title of the play needs to be put under quotation marks, and it needs to be capitalized in the correct way (nouns, pronouns, adjectives etc. need to be capitalized). However, the author's name doesn't need quotation marks.</span>
Answer:
- <u>I</u> <u>was</u> so anxious, <u>who could be interested</u> in my sensations?
- <u>I was astonished looking</u> at <u>the blue sky</u>, which <u>should calm</u> my anguish.
- <u>The dog</u> that <u>I will choose will be</u> the one that <u>ha</u>s scarves around the ears, which <u>should be</u> very animated.
- Did <u>I show</u> how <u>nervous I was</u>?
- Everything was revealed to my eyes, which were covered from the beginning.
Explanation:
Subordinate clauses are those that are meaningless if they are alone, for this reason, they need a complement, so that the whole system can show a clear message.
In addition, you need to know what is verb and subject. The verb is every word that indicates an action, a sensation and a phenomenon of nature. The subject, in turn, is the term, within the sentence, to which the verb is referring, that is, it is the one that is making the verb happen.
Answer:
Callous
(kæləs )
Explore 'callous' in the dictionary
<h2>ADJECTIVE
</h2>
A callous person or action is very cruel and shows no concern for other people or their feelings. [...]
callousness UNCOUNTABLE NOUN
callously ADVERB [ADVERB with verb]
Explanation:
disregard
(dɪsrɪgɑːʳd )
Explore 'disregard' in the dictionary
VERB
If you disregard something, you ignore it or do not take account of it. [...]
Disregard is also a noun. [...]
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