This has the rhyme scheme of a hybrid sonnet, with the rhymes following:
abba abba cdcd ee
The first two stanzas follow the same rhyme pattern-abba abba-with the end words:
skies/face/place/tries
eyes/case/grace/decsries
Then the next quatrain begins a new, more Shakespearean format-cdcd-with the end words:
me/wit/be/yet
Finally, the rhyming couplet at the end finishes the sonnet with 'ee':
posesse/ungratefulnesse
An imperative sentence is one in which you order somebody to do something.
So, this sentence could be rewritten as an imperative sentence like this:
Go to the La Brea tar pits!
The answer would be A. whose
B. who's would not make sense in this situation because who's is a contraction which means 'who is'. If that was to be used in the answer, the sentence would be, "Margaret wants to knwo<em> who is</em> bike this is," which makes no sense whatsoever
Whose shows possession
Hope my answer helped! :)
Short answer B
Argument
It isn't C either. Any number of reasons could be the cause of a book that size. Taking care of the building alone would result in a huge number of pages that don't really concern anyone but the owner and the person responsible for taking care of the building. Tax deductions would be another problem and so would overtime and reporting methods.
Assembly lines methods have nothing to do with lights that offer options to the basic model of anything being made assembled or manufactured. Not in the way fast foods would use the term.
The answer is B. The object is to get the hamburgers cooked. Knowing that the process takes 90 seconds and they start frozen, go onto a conveyor belt and come out cooked is so typical of assembly line methods.