Answer:
1. the quality of being unchanged from the original state. Sentence 1: Despise their hard work, the miners were only able to find a small amount of crude minerals in the mine they were excavating.
3. the quality of being blunt or offensive. Sentence 4: The audience booed the comedian off the stage because his crude jokes were very inappropriate.
4. the quality of being rough in execution. Sentence 3. The architect drew a crude sketch of his designs to give his clients a general idea of what he wanted to build.
So A,C and E
Explanation:
Is talking would be your answer
Answer:
When we first meet Romeo, he is despairing over the unrequited love of Rosaline. Since we see his decision to attend the Capulet party from his point of view, we know he is going in hopes of seeing Rosaline. By introducing the audience to Romeo before he meets Juliet, the play lets us see who he is as an individual, and how he is changed by love. Romeo initially seems more in love with the idea of love than Rosaline herself. He suggests that love is madness, and fleeting. Romeo suffers because he thought he was in love, but his girl decided she wanted to be chaste. To him, love is fickle and changeable. In a way, Romeo's complaints foreshadow what is about to happen.
The answer to the first passage would be A because the second paragraph provides he author's reflection about her mother. The answer to passage would be B because even the author had a hard time pronouncing some of the words in her deleted sentence.
Answer: In<em> "Love Song, With Two Goldfish</em>", the female fish is unhappy in her relationship with the male fish. In<em> "To My Dear and Loving Husband",</em> it seems that both the man and woman are happy. Their marriage is described as a union.
Explanation:
In<em> "Love Song, With Two Goldfish"</em>, Grace Chua tells a love story about the two fishes - a male fish that wants to get the attention of the female fish. By describing the relationship between the fishes, the author provides a metaphor for a relationship between a man and woman. The two fishes are forced to live in a bowl, so their love lacks adventure. The female fish wants "a life beyond the bowl", which the male fish, hard though he tries, cannot give to her. The female fish is, therefore, clearly dissatisfied with their relationship.
In Anne Bradstreet's poem, "<em>To My Dear and Loving Husband"</em>, we have a different relationship. Namely, the speaker of the poem describes her love for her husband, celebrating their union and happiness. She claims that she can never repay him for the love that he gives her. It seems that these two people are very happy in their marriage and satisfied with what they have.