Answer:
real becouse of the statement
Answer:
she treats him very suspiciously and is still somewhat angry because she knows he had an affair with Abigail. the problem of the relationship is that he had an affair with Abigail and she watches his every move because she is suspicious and worried it might happen again.
Makes the reader wonder what "doesn't love a wall."
Answer: Option 1.
<u>Explanation:</u>
This line has been taken from the poem "Mending wall". In the line The fact that the speaker does not specify what, precisely, is the "Something" that "sends the frozen-ground-swell" under the fence could mean that the word something refers to nature, as another educator suggested, or even God. The word "sends" in line two implies that the sender has a will, a conscious purpose, so it seems logical to consider the possibility we should attribute such a sending to a higher being.
Further, in the lines which follow the first two, this "Something" also "spills" the big rocks from the top of the fence out into the sun and "makes gaps" in the fence where two grown men can walk through, side by side (lines 3, 4). These verbs are also active, like "sends," and imply reason and purpose to the one who performs the actions. Therefore, it is plausible that the "Something" which sends "the frozen-ground-swell"—freezing the water in the ground so that the ground literally swells and bursts the fence with the movement—"spills boulders," and "makes gaps" refers to God.
Trevor’s gardening position
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The s<span>entences below include only prepositional phrases (no participial or absolute phrases and no dependent clauses) are the below:
</span><span>A.)Then one, and then another of the boys carne up on the far side of the barrier of rock, and he understood that they had swum through some gap or hole in it.
B.)There was no one visible; under him, in the water, the dim shapes of the swimmers had disappeared.</span>