Answer:
Your answer would be the following one: their, there, buy, and by.
Explanation:
The first option is the possessive determiner because you can see that the word is followed by a noun phrase. Possessive determiners are words that are used in front of nouns to express possession. They occur with a noun and they do not replace noun phrases as pronouns do.
The second option is the adverb "there". In this case, the adverb of place has been used to refer to a place that has already been mentioned (the convention). Then, the third option is the verb "buy". The word is preceded by the indefinite particle and followed by an NP which functions as the direct object. Finally, the last option is the preposition "by". That PP takes an NP complement "their favorite author".
Answer and Explanation:
The triple parallelism can be found in the lines "who does not walk in step with the wicked or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the company of mockers," where the author shows a progression on the type of people the righteous , that is, God's chosen ones cannot keep company.
Parallelism is a literary resource that presents sentences located in sequence, which present the same structure and strength within a text.
Answer: B)
Explanation:
This is showing that he doesn't care about his daughter because he is trying to sell her to the men.
He wanted to sell her for any price and because of that they were offering him ten pounds and he refused it. He refused it because he was thinking that he should get five pounds because when the weekend comes he would drink for those five pounds and ten pounds would involve him in the responsibility to drink too much.
Shakespeare's play "The Tempest" is considered as a "revenge tragedy". Revenge is a significant theme in the course of the play. Prospero's magic provides him with the power to take revenge against his brother Antonio and those who usurped his dukedom, situation which set his daughter Miranda and him on an island. However revengeful the play can be, in the end we witness forgiveness. The most suitable option for expressing a theme is C.