21. b
22. c
23. a
24. a
25. c
26. d
27. b
28. c
29. a
30. b
31. b
32. d
33. a
34. c
35. c
36. a
37. d
38. c
39. a
40. a
41. d
42. c
I think I did this assignment before so these are my answers. Hope this helps!!
Answer: a) The speaker declares that his beloved’s loveliness will live on forever through his poetry, unlike the short-lived summer season.
Explanation:
Everything will eventually die with time. Even the sun is not spared death with time. That is the function of time, to eventually kill everything and leave it in Death's shade.
This is what William Shakespeare speaks of in this poem. He infers that summer will fade with time and so will her beauty but that he has found a way to circumvent time by writing of her beauty in a poem. And for as long as people can read, her beauty will never be killed by time for it will last forever.
Answer:
Idiom
Explanation:
The options you were given are the following:
- allusion
-
apostrophe
-
hyperbole
-
idiom
Idioms are phrases that don't have a literal meaning. This means that we can't conclude what a phrase means based on the meanings of words that make it up. We simply have to learn what these phrases mean.
An example of an idiom is <em>in one ear and out the other</em><em>.</em> This doesn't mean that something enters through one and exits through the other ear. Actually, this expression refers to an instance when someone ignores, dismisses, or forgets something almost immediately after being told. In this case, Dahl's antagonist keeps forgetting Billy's name instantly after hearing it.
In this sentence :
"You also learn what it takes to make money: a lot of effort.”
The main verb is "learn". The verb Takes is also a verb but since it is within the next clause and it is the verb of the Cataphoric refrence "it" such verb cannot be considered the main verb of the sentence.
So your final aswer is Learn.
if this is about conflict then the answer is
external conflict