I looked this question up and found it refers to Sonnet 100 by William Shakespeare.
Answer:
The central idea of the sonnet is:
B. The speaker wants his muse to help him immortalize his love.
Explanation:
British writer William Shakespeare (1564-1616) is to this day one of the most famous names in literature. He wrote famous plays such as "Romeo and Juliet" and "Macbeth" as well as sonnets that are still appreciated and much studied.
<u>In Sonnet 100, the speaker addresses his muse. A muse is a goddess of the arts that can bring an artist inspiration. That is precisely what the speaker wants: inspiration to write about his beloved one in a way that will immortalize her. He is asking the muse to come back and start helping him find the words to do such a grand job.</u>
<h2>
Answer: The third one (Good summaries provide all the data an author uses for support.)</h2>
EXPLANATIONS:
"Good summaries include the writer's opinion on the article." This one isn't correct, because writer's opinions don't matter in summaries. That's like putting your own opinion in your own summary. It's not an important part.
"Good summaries focus on the support details from the body" Support details are for when you're writing the main idea. For summaries, you're just summarizing up what the text says, in some of your own words.
"Good summaries provide all the data an author uses for support." Yes, Summaries provide data an author used for support. Like I said earlier, summaries are the summarized version of what the text says. So basically, you don't want to add boring, un-needed data/details. Use the important data/details the author used.
"Good summaries objectively restate the thesis and crucial details." This is definitely incorrect. Theses (plural form of thesis) are statements that include your opinion. You'd most likely need to use a thesis in an argumentative essay. Also, crucial details are facts to support your thesis. You wouldn't be needing these in your summary.
Its a. Sometimes, we have to rethink a situation in light of nee knowledge
True but is a correlative conjunction