A. Preposition: over; object of the preposition: bridge
A preposition shows the location of an object, it shows where something is. In this case the preposition is "over" as that is the only word that is showing 'where' something is and thus the car becomes the object.
<span>In
his relationship with Stephano, Caliban is deemed more pathetic than
in his relationship to Prospero. He lets go of his rebellious
attitude and he willingly becomes a slave to Stephano, who is know as
a drunkard and a buffoon,
Caliban shows himself to be in a pathetic state. The strong and
vicious curses that he had sent to his old master Prosphero are
replaced by requests to lick the shoe of Stephano.</span>
<span>I
hope this helps, Regards.</span>
If the instruction
is to make this sentence in present progressive tense, here is the answer:
In the novel I am reading,
the hero returns to where he had lived as a child.
<span>
Present progressive
tense suggests action either happening in the present or in the future. In the
sentence given, the action happens in the present. This type of tense is usually followed by adverbs of time.</span>
This is definitely true, I would focus on how hasty romeo is.
The main point is where he sees Juliet at the party and says 'did my heart love till now?'. This comes right after his long petarchan soliloquy which focuses on his mourning over losing Rosaline.
He spends a whole scene moping over her, but the moment he sees Juliet he has forgotten all about her. This is just one example of his fickle tenancies, and makes the reader question whether he ever loved or was it all just lust?
Another example is that in the first scene he discusses his hatred for violence, yet after mercutios death he murders tybalt without haste. Romeo becomes increasingly fickle and unpredictable as the play progresses.