Answer:
i WILL ANSWER IN COMMENTS
Explanation:
The repetition of "If ever... then..." emphasizes the narrator's message of love as a commitment, similar to the repetition found in wedding vows.
Answer: Option D.
<u>Explanation:</u>
These lines have been taken from the poem "To my dear and loving husband". It was written by Anne Bradstreet and Liza Ross. The theme of the poem is love.
Love is a strong feeling which makes two people come close to each and other and have kept them united. There is commitment and a powerful force which keeps the husband and the wife in the poem close to each other and bonded to each other.
Answer:
B because... ↓
Explanation:
"...well, just wait and see" is an interrupter, so you could use a comma or a dash.
tips: Maybe an elipises can be used. It can also be split up into two sentences.
Correct:
I am so happy that you got the job that I will... Well, just wait and see.
I am so happy that you got the job that I will---well, just wait and see.
Incorrect:
I am so happy that you got the job that I will well, just wait and see.
I am so happy that you got the job that I will. Well, just wait and see.
This is kind of an unnatural sentence to read and say, but I hope I helped ^_^
The poem ends with an acceptance that pleasure cannot last and that death is an inevitable part of life. In the poem, Keats imagines the loss of the physical world and sees himself dead—as a "sod" over which the nightingale sings.
Three main thoughts stand out in the ode. The second main thought and the main theme of the poem is Keats' wish that he might die and be rid of life altogether, providing he could die as easily and painlessly as he could fall asleep. Hearing this the author doesn’t think that dying is going to be painful the author is hoping to make it easy as “falling asleep”
Hope I was help
Answer: People cut down about 15 billion trees every year, some of them to make paper. Save your sheets by using the back, buying recycled paper, and asking your teacher to sometimes switch from printed homework to online assignments.
Explanation: