Answer:
Although there is no omnipresent and controlling being in the whole world today, we can say that all human beings are controlled at some point.
Explanation:
Big Brother is someone who has all the control and can see everything in George Orwell's novel.
Today there is no such thing, but nevertheless we can say that all our actions are controlled.
Each citizen is controlled by his rulers or must carry out the laws that they impose as well as obey the police.
At another point we can say that we are being controlled by technology, things like voice searches or ads that appear after we talk about a certain topic with someone.
This could be seen a bit like the novel where a Big Brother is watching us.
Answer:
B. line 4 <em>That busy archer his sharp arrows tries?</em>
Explanation:
In Sonnet XXX or Sonnet 31, Philip Sydney (1554 – 1586) comments on the pale and sad appearance of moon, and he wonders why it is so. He asks the sun in line 4 whether there is also love which makes him pale and sad. He asks this by alluding to Cupid (the Roman god of love). Cupid is often portrayed with a bow and an arrow, and whoever is shot by that arrow falls in love. So, whoever falls in love is figuratively said to have been shot by Cupid's arrow.
The line 4 alludes to Cupid by calling him "that busy archer". Apart from this mythical allusion there is no allusion in this sonnet.
To make a point and to make people like you or want to make people want to buy something
I assume you mean the three tenses, but let me know if you need more.
Past Tense: "Birds flew in the sky."
Future Tense: "Birds will fly in the sky."
The sentence is already in the present tense.