D. Babysit for you next weekend? Sure, I'll just cancel my trip to Disney
World. It probably would have been mildly entertaining, but that's O.K.
The adverb is either because it helps describe the sentence more.
Answer:
This line is spoken by Satan in the epic poem Paradise Lost, written by John Milton (1667). ... Basically, this quote is Satan trying to make himself feel better about living in a pit of fire. He figures if he puts his mind to it, Hell can be just as good as Heaven any old day.
Explanation:
The lines that contain metaphors are:
1)“My thoughts of you are golden coins”
2) “Stamped in the mint of memory”
A metaphor is a literary device that makes an implicit comparison between unrelated items or ideas. Despite of the fact that they seem to differ in many respects, there is a hidden connection between them. It differs from others figures of speech; namely Simile as it refers to an explicit comparison (use of “like” or “as”) that is established between to ideas or items.
In this particular poem, the author says that her thought is a very valuable treasure to her, especially because they are related to a special person to her. For this reason, the author makes a comparison between her thoughts and the treasured golden coins. Then, she continues adding another metaphor. She says that these precious memories will never disappear as they kept in her memory as golden coins are safe and properly stored in a mint.
Answer:
“-ible” is a suffix
and “in-” is a prefix
Explanation:
By definition, a prefix is <em>"a word, letter, or number placed before another."</em>
In this case, "in-" is placed before credible, which means that it is a prefix.
In the end of the word, we have the suffix, <em>"-ible".</em>
Suffix, by definition, is: <em>"a morpheme added at the end of a word to form a derivative"</em>