Answer: c:to gain support for nonviolent resistance
Answer:
sole
Explanation:
The word "sole" used in the text to utter a pun together with the word "single" and to stimulate the creation of a joke about the state Romeo was in, as he was single and suffering from a Platonic love he felt for Rosaline .
This excerpt, shown in the question above, was taken from the play "Romeo and Juliet" written by Shakespeare, who was an author who used many puns in his works, making trivial jokes that promoted a comic relief or hid meanings that would be revealed in the course of history.
Answer:
have struck you
Explanation:
hath is old English for have and thee is old English for you
Answer: Mystery im pretty sure
Explanation:
The answer to your question would be that the subject of the sentence is "there" and the verb is "are". That is, the correct option would be B.
The existential there is the use of the expletive "there" in front of a verb (usually the copulative verb "to be") to assert that someone or something exists. In fact, the existential there has the status of a dummy subject fulfilling the grammatical but not the semantic function of the subject.