Answer:
dude you know we don't now those following article I'll just take B.
Explanation:
Review sometimes
Answer:
he's not nervous?
Explanation:
He probs doesn't have stage fright or got over his fear and is confident now. there's not enough text for me to know for sure
Answer:
Explanation:
I personally think that it would be totally different. You wouldn't be able to see what people look like or be able to hear what they're saying. You'd have to learn braille. I've tried to learn braille and it's very hard. I honestly don't think I'd be able to learn how to read braille. I would also feel really bad for the people that are blind and deaf. Just us having those privileges and they don't makes me feel bad for them.
The correct answer is sighing from desire.
Indeed, the lexical field is populated with words that express tenderness, beauty and purity. However, there is a symbolic, underlying carnal desire in the poem. The sibilance is very ambiguous, just as the meaning of the words used to convey it (shade, less, grace, waves, tress). The word “waves” is especially evocative, as it expresses the waves of desire of the narrator for the beautiful woman.
Eating sugar because they want to avoid it