Answer: Romeo's impulsive nature leads to the tragic ending of the play.
Explanation:
In this excerpt from <em>Act II, Scene II,</em> Juliet describes Romeo's actions as<em> "too rash, too unadvised, too sudden." </em>Romeo jumps the Capulets' wall to confess his love for Juliet and propose to her. As this happens on the eve they met, Juliet claims that Romeo is rushing into revealing his feelings, and is afraid that this would have a negative impact on their relationship. In this particular excerpt, Juliet compares Romeo's actions to lightning, <em>"which flashes and then disappears before you can say..."</em> It turns out that she was right - Romeo's impulsive nature leads to their death. At the end of the play, he impulsively reacts when he finds out that Juliet is dead, and kills himself before the Friar has a chance to tell him she is, in fact, alive.
Answer:
c
Explanation:
the subject is the plant, the verb is growing, hence subject-verb
A vague pronoun reference might include words such as it, that, this, and which, and can leave the reader wondering what or to whom the pronoun refers!
hope this helps! :3
Answer:
Perhaps... Because absolute perfection is impossible to achieve.
Explanation:
There are always some flaws, and it is because of flaws that we are unique. There are even some examples where groups of people become so obsessed with perfectionism that they do horrible, evil things. For example, a certain german leader of World War 2, who believed that the 'perfect' race were those of 'true aryan descent'. To be specific, skin as white as snow, blond hair, and blue eyes. Those who wish to achieve absolute perfectionism, no matter their intent, shall never be able to achieve their goals. Especially if they wish to keep their morals intact and hands clean.