Explanation:
Answer is in a photo. I can't attach it here, but I uploaded it to a file hosting. link below! Good Luck!
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<span>I watched as she slid across the floor. She looked like a seal sliding from the tub to the radiator. The entire journey was about 10 feet, but it felt like it took around 10 minutes for her to make that slide. Head first she bonked into the radiator, still wet and slightly covered by soap, shampoo and the shower curtain trailing her like some cape. Map woman. Europe and Africa covering her more delicate bits as she slid. I stood there, unsure how to react. Should I pick her up? Do I laugh? Do I just sit there and try to calculate what exactly happen. I smiled while I wait for her reaction, which is a mixture of tears, laughter, and sheer embarrassment. I finally get the ability to laugh to the ridiculousness of her and this moment, sliding like a seal into the radiator. It was the most graceful thing I've ever seen her do.</span>
Answer:
B)Of-, (d) is , (f)gold
Explanation:
Meter of Sonnet 18. "And often is his gold complexion dimm'd"
The syllables that Amber should highlight are of-, is, and gold. This seems to be the pentameter. there are five feet in it and these syllables all alternate between unstressed and stressed syllables which indicate that the syllables in the poem meter is written in iambic pentameter i.e The five stressed syllables show the meter to be iambic pentameter.The sequence of standard iambic goes in the row between unstressed, stressed, follow by an unstressed, stressed syllables.
I tried, I practiced then succeeded
A couple years ago my grades were really bad but I started focusing on myself more and then got better at everything as I did a bit of revising everyday , only for like 30 minutes though but it helped a lot , I also stopped cheating on my tests and in class and focused on what I could and couldn’t do :)