The third sentence. An abstract noun is a noun you can’t physically see or touch (examples of this are usually emotions like love, hate, excitement, etc). In the third sentence, opinion is a noun. You cannot see or touch an opinion.
The answer is B. because she doesn't truly plan to marry Paris, so she doesn't really need "ornaments." She's being misleading.
The daffodils looked like they were dancing.
Throughout the poem, the speaker describes what he is seeing as he is daydreaming laying on his couch. He starts the poem by describing how he is floating like a cloud and suddenly sees "a host, of golden daffodils". He then goes on to describe the daffodils. He says the daffodils flutter and dance. He goes on to compare them to stars and sparkling waves. The purpose is to show how the daffodils provide a happy positive distraction that fills his heart with pleasure.
Well, because the word 'mother' is the English translation of the Latin word 'mater', they mean the same thing. So, I am assuming we are supposed to find two words which have the same etymology like this one, to complete the analogy. So, I believe the answer is A) autonomy : autos, because 'autos' is the root of the word 'autonomy', the same way 'mater' is for 'mother'.