Sicut voluit esse amicos fluctus Rockbert
The infinitive is the base form of a verb. In English, the infinitive is marked by placing a "to" before the verb, for example:
drink - this is just a regular verb
to drink - this is the infinitive of the verb
To conjugate a verb means to change its form to express tense, mood, person and so on. Verbs change as they are used with different people and different time.
With people:
I drink
You drink
He/She/It drinks
We drink
You drink
They drink
With time:
I drank
You have drunk
He/She/It had drunk
We/You/They will drink
In Spanish (tho you may not need this), the infinitive is marked by three endings + the stem of the verb:
1. AR: hablar, cantar
2. ER: hacer, querer
3. IR: decir, venir
And the conjugation is much more complicated.
Depends on the form of you.
Informal form of you: Lo que es mío es tu y lo que es tuyo es mío.
Formal form of you: Lo que esmío es su y lo que es suyo es mío.
The answer to the question:
<span>What kind of figurative language can be identified in the following quote from "Annabel Lee"? "With a love that the wingèd seraphs of Heaven Coveted her and me." A. Metaphor B. Simile C. Hyperbole D. Personification
is:
</span>C. Hyperbole
Mention the narrator's attitude towards the professional ascent of the ox, Referring to the second stanza of the text
That's the question up there y'all