・ ◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎◼︎◻︎・
The men in the room have three wives
The government has fulfilled its promises
The governments have fulfilled its promises
Either my father or I am atending the meeting
Neither you, not I, nor anyone else knows the secret.
Brainliest?
When you see a sentence not make sense it's usually because you are leaving out important words or mixing them up in the wrong way in that sentence so due to this knowledge a dangling modifier would be C.
Answer: dreams and ambition by using metaphors.
Explanation: As you know, a metaphor is acomparison between things that are not related with each other at first sight, that is why that In the given excerpt from Act II of "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare, we can see the use of metaphors to compare and describe dreams (by comparing them to ambition and shadow: "Which dreams, indeed, are ambition" and "A dream itself is but a shadow") and ambition (by comparing it to a shadow's that can be: "and I hold ambition of so airy and light a quality that it is but a shadow’s shadow". Hope this helps.
Answer:
Following are the solution to this question:
Explanation:
In the major Chicago fire, which has been supposed to behave started with such a cow turning over even a lamp, compounded either by lack of water to expel the town's fires or floods alongside high winds. All that could go wrong and did so, all burnt to the ground except for the liquid and sump pump throughout Chicago, that endured all as they had water covered with woolen clothes and ships soaked in salt.
In Act 3, Scene 2:
CALIBAN
(to TRINCULO) Thou liest, thou jesting monkey, thou! I would my valiant master would destroy thee. I do not lie. " (The Tempest, Act 3, Scene 2)
Caliban calls Ariel "a jesting monkey" and a liar, who is in turn, speaking as Trínculo. Ariel is imitating Trínculo´s voice and is invisible, thus the confussion. It is worth mentioning that "jester" means fool.