In William Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18," the line best paraphrases to but your youth will never fade.
In "Sonnet 18" Shakespeare tries to compare a fair maiden to a summer's day, but he expresses that there is nothing that compares to her because her perpetual beauty and youth are far greater than such a temporary, inconsistent season.
So, when Shakespeare writes <span>"<span>But thy eternal summer shall not fade,</span>" he is saying that her timeless youth will never fade, unlike the briefness of a summer's day.</span>
I believe the correct answer is the sentence about snow cones.
If you would like my reasoning on why the others are incorrect please respond saying so and I will get back to you as quickly as I can.
Hope this helps.
Answer:
educateing
Explanation:
it's not following the rule! it should be<em> educating</em>
bye!!!!
Answer: they could think that you meant something different
Explanation: like you could say i hate you but if you say it in the wrong tone
they could think you actually hate them which could be bad
Answer:
The answer should be B :) have a good day
Explanation: