Methinks already from this chemic flame, I see a city of more precious mould: Rich as the town which gives the Indies name, With silver paved, and all divine with gold.
1: A. deer's
2: B. king's
3. A. books'
4. B. turtle's
For 1., we're looking for more than one deer. Since two deer left tracks, it is plural. Add the plural possessive form 's. (deer's) (You can't say "deers" even if there are more than one, the proper way is "deer". That's why the apostrophe is before the s.)
For 2., we're looking the crown of only one king, so it is singular. Add 's (king's).
For 3., we're talking about multiple books, so you add the plural possessive form s' (books').
For 4., there is one turtle, so it is singular. Add 's (turtle's).
I hope this helped! :-)
Answer:
I never read/watched/heard this before but it seems that when this guy say "before hatred ate my heart" hes probably implying that his heart is full of hatred.
Mark brainliest pls :)
D, "their." Since you're talking about two of them, it's plural. The sentence:
Neither Carol nor Ellen would hesitate to share their supplies with you.