Not sure exactly what you are asking for, but when you refuse permission, an appropriate response would be:
"I do not wish for my child to participate in today's events as I do not feel it will benefit his learning."
A good response to give permission:
"I give permission for my child to participate in today's events."
Answer:
The interpretation of the "farewell speech by Polonius to Laertes is given below:
"Try to think of it like that, anyway. When a youth grows into a man, he doesn’t just get bigger in his body—his responsibilities grow too. He may love you now, and may have only the best intentions, but you have to be on your guard.
Remember that he belongs to the royal family, and his intentions don’t matter that much—he’s a slave to his family obligations. He can’t simply make personal choices for himself the way common people can, since the whole country depends on what he does. His choice has to agree with what the nation wants.
So if he says he loves you, you should be wise enough to see that his words only mean as much as the state of Denmark allows them to mean.
Then think about how shameful it would be for you to give in to his seductive talk and surrender your treasure chest to his greedy hands. Watch out, Ophelia. Just keep your love under control, and don’t let yourself become a target of his lust.
Simply exposing your beauty to the moon at night is risky enough—you don’t have to expose yourself to him. Even good girls sometimes get a bad reputation. Worms ruin flowers before they blossom. Baby blooms are most susceptible to disease. So be careful. Fear will keep you safe. Young people often lose their self-control even without any help from others."
Explanation:
Answer:
D is the answer
Explanation: First person is from the characters point of view. So the person speaking is in the story and experiencing everything. Here’s an example of first person: “I ate the eggs.” First person usually uses the pronoun I.
Answer:
1. most modifies success. indefinite adjective
2. yellow modifies chair.
3.Our modifies teacher
4. Two modifies people
5. Tired modifies Mr. Gentry
Explanation:
I'm really sorry. I don't know the rest of the answers...
The theme of this is the idea that all the actions which you do to try to determine the aesthetic of a poem is vain if you in any way feel the need to manipulate it or even try to interpret it -- it is its own being. It is a complex, incalculable demonstration of beauty.