Answer:
1 False 3 True 4 False 5 False 10 False
Answer:
D. It may represent the colosseum American literature came to producing an analog for “Ulysses,” which influenced it deeply - each in its way is a provincial Modernist novel about a young man trying to awaken from history - and like “Ulysses,” it lives as a book more praised than read, or more esteemed than enjoyed.
Explanation:
<span>1 archaic : happy, pleased
2 archaic : inclined, desirous
3 a : willing
he was very fain, for the young widow was “altogether fair and lovely … ” — Amy Kelly
b : being obliged or constrained : compelled
Great Britain was fain to devote its whole energy … to the business of slaying and being slain — G. M. Trevelyan</span>
It would be A because the only thing the sentence needed was a subject and once you add mike to the sentence fragment, it becomes a sentence without changing anything besides the person who called and left a message
<span>Person versus person
In this case, it appears Romeo and Paris are arguing. Paris has come to arrest Romeo for the death of Tybalt, yet Romeo resists.</span>