Answer:
The poet is comparing the children to dogs barking at his world, because children who shout, yell, get annoyed by little things, so some of them throw a tantrum //side note: like dogs barking// at their parents :3
Explanation:
:3
Answer:
No, it is not.
Explanation:
The kind of love portrayed in the story, "A midsummer night's dream", is not the Agape love that we understand as Christians. Eros, that is, romantic love was displayed by the characters in Shakespeare's story. This is different from the Christian love, Agape, which is pure, sacrificial, and unconditional.
Oberon, King of the Fairies, did not also display 'Agape love' when he was not pleased with Titania for not giving him the child. He was angry with her and revenged by putting a love portion in her eyes to fall in love with Bottom. That was not the Christian love that is not easily angered, keeps no record of wrong or self-seeking.
The answer is C. limits the meaning of the word it describes.
It should not be set off by commas, it can occur at the beginning or the end of a sentence, and doesn't function as an adverb.
Example: The man who lives next door is old.
This restrictive clause limits "the man" to say it's specifically the one next door.
Got is in past tense form