Answer:
A lot of foreign films are subtitled.
In Chinese poetry, a couplet (simplified Chinese: 对联; traditional Chinese: 對聯; pinyin: About this sound duìlián) is a pair of lines of poetry which adhere to certain rules (see below). Outside of poems, they are usually seen on the sides of doors leading to people's homes or as hanging scrolls in an interior. Although often called antithetical couplet, they can better be described as a written form of counterpoint. The two lines have a one-to-one correspondence in their metrical length, and each pair of characters must have certain corresponding properties. A couplet is ideally profound yet concise, using one character per word in the style of Classical Chinese. A special, widely seen type of couplet is the spring couplet (simplified Chinese: 春联; traditional Chinese: 春聯; pinyin: chūnlián), used as a New Year's decoration that expresses happiness and hopeful thoughts for the coming year.
Answer: The correct answer is B. He's dating Maria, and I dated her last year. Sentence fragments are groups of words that look like sentences, but aren't, they cannot stand alone.
<span>These lines show that the author lived during a time when many blacks were employed as servants to upper-class white women. His poem suggests that a woman he knew (or maybe even worked for) believed that this is what God intended and so even in heaven she expects this regal treatment.</span>