The protagonists is Scout but following close behind her is her father. Scout is a curious girl and questions all that her dad says. This gives us, the readers, a chance to really immerse ourselves into the story as we follow it alongside Scout. We further connect with her as we are "on the same boat" as her, in the sense that we only discover things as she does in the book, when she does. There is no dramatic irony ( not that i remember)
Hello!
The infinitive phrase here is “To play the piano” because infinitive phrases are phrases which contains “to”
Here it acts like a noun.
Hope this helps:)
The answer that is correct about the rhyme schemes of the quatrains in Shakespeare's sonnets is D) the first and third lines and the second and fourth lines of each quatrain rhyme. For example:
My mistress' eyes are nothing like the <u>sun;
</u>Coral is far more red than her lips' red;
<u></u>If snow be white, why then her breasts are <u>dun;
</u>If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head. <u>
</u>
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