Answer:
The definite article (the) is used before a noun to indicate that the identity of the noun is known to the reader. The indefinite article (a, an) is used before a noun that is general or when its identity is not known. There are certain situations in which a noun takes no article.
Explanation:
Yes, I believe she would be welcoming. Even though the last part of the poem sounds like a curse ("<span>May the young man be sad-minded with hard heart-thoughts"), it is still a statement of the speaker's enduring love for him. She suffers, but imagines that he suffers too, in the exile or wherever he is, and remembers their happy days with sorrow. Her depression has elements of embitteredness, but her love for him is not disputable.</span>
Answer:
my teacher taught me a simple because it uses "like" or "as" always!
"<span>B.While you may not know the opera, many people
recognize part of the overture from William Tell as the theme from an
old TV show, The Lone Ranger" is right as long as "The Lone Ranger" is in italics.
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