A) it encourages change or reform.
Satire is always a critique about something. Even if it’s a humorous satire.
Answer:
The purpose of these lines is to express love by likening a loved one to a nice day.
Explanation:
Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18" expresses admiration for a young person - many say it is a young man, but the sonnet itself does not make it clear who the speaker is addressing. The speaker compares this "fair youth" to a summer's day, but this person is more temperate, more lovely. While summer can be filled with extremes - sun shining too hot or too dim; rough winds -, the addressed person is more pleasant. While summer does not last long, this person's beauty shall last forever, immortalized in this sonnet, read about by people in years and years to come. The purpose of the sonnet is to express love and admiration for this person; the comparison with the summer's day is a tool that serves that purpose.
Answer:
were interested in Edwards's ideas about religion.
Explanation:
There was a religious revival that happened in the mid-1700s in the colonies and this was characterized by Jonathan Edward's sermon which he called, "Sinners in the hands of an angry God" that was an important factor for the Great Awakening.
His sermon focused on telling people about individual sin and how they should be converted to make heaven which was very popular among the colonists because they were interested in Edward's ideas about religion.
Answer:
The first or second choices. it could really be either.
Explanation:
I'm not sure if it's a multiple choice question but those two are both correct.
The speaker is Bruce the speaker is an older man that wears this red jacket wit loose threads he likes working on cars or painting the story is being told from 3rd point of view the man is mad that his parts to fix the car didn’t come in