Answer:
1 has a miss spelt word (speach)*speech
Umm that’s good I just need points
<span>to befriend- help<span>
<span>to
quarrel - argue</span>
<span>to trus -secure</span>
<span>to argue - quarrel</span>
<span>to cheat - trick</span>
<span>to betray - deceive</span>
to need
- require
to break
up -split
to last
- endure
to help
-assist
to offer
-provide
to support
-help
to present
- show
to accept
- receieve
to
encourage - inspire
to pity
- sympathize
give
synonyms for:
<span>to admire - appreciate</span>
to sculpt
- carve
<span>to carve -sculpt</span>
to
ornament -adorn
<span>to prefer – favor</span>
to be
fond of -desire
<span>to take
pictures – capture images</span>
<span>to learn
-study</span></span></span>
I think it might be "what are you doing tonight"
Answer:
It contains exactly 14 lines.
Explanation:
This poem is written in free verse, and has no rhyme scheme, the only thing in common that it has with the Elizabethan sonnet, which has a strict structure and a rhyme scheme that goes like this:
ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.
As this poem has no rhyme scheme detectable, the only way that it resembles a Elizabethan sonnet is the fact that it has 14 lines, in this case, the format doesn´t allow you to see it but the whole:
"Like childre aling the graveled walks of the garden, Diego´s"
That is a whole line, but the format can´t keep it together.