Answer:
A man who lusts obsessively after a woman is afflicted lechery.
Answer:
You should put a comma there.
Explanation:
The comma puts a small pause in the sentence.
It would be transitive. A transitive has a direct object, something that it the verb is acting on. The verb is belive. The direct object is what it's acting on, so, what is he believing? In music. He is believing on the music, so since it has a direct object, it's transitive.
It would be intransitive if it didn't have a direct object:
<em>I believe.
</em><em>He believed.
</em><em />
But as soon as you add any kind of direct object it's transitive:
<em>I believed him.
</em><em>He believed the dog.</em>
The correct answer is 3.
These three are Old English, until the 12th century, Middle English, until the 16th century, and Modern English, since Shakespeare.