Answer:
The prefix 'im-' means not. When this prefix is added to words, the words then negate the meaning of the initial word
Like the prefix mis-, the prefix dis- can mean different things. But usually it means one of the following: “Lack of, not,” as in dishonest. “Removal or reversal,” as in disinfect.
The answer is a rhyming device. the pattern that I'm seeing is abcb.
The set of lines from Act I, Scene V of Shakespeare's "Twelve Night" that shows Olivia's interest in Cesario's (Viola's) social rank when Viola tries to woo Olivia on Orsino's behalf are "What is your parentage? 'Above my fortunes, yet my state is well: I am a gentleman.' -I'll be sworn thou art." Olivia asks Cesario about his social position, she is seeing him as interesting and then finds out she is falling in love with him. In Elizabethan times, a person's social position was very important. Someone of a lower rank could not marry a person of a higher rank. Olivia is a beautiful lady of noble birth so she has to consider very carefully whom she marries to.
Amused about the outcome of something