Explanation:
it's true for example: dye die; dual duel. These words are <u>HOMONYMS</u>
Answer: out of your mind, not in your senses
The answer is d. Pious and obidient
B and C both seem like irrelevant choices to me. choice A definitely relates to the excerpt, because the main idea of it is that ethiopians should be given "a respect agreeable" and choice A describes that idea. however, in the case of choice B, the excerpt says that ethiopians are the children of adam and eve, but that doesn't necessarily suggest that ethiopians and africans are from the same location. i think B is too literal of an interpretation, personally. C also seems irrelevant, because the excerpt doesn't mention the concept of love and it doesn't state that we should love them--it says that they should be treated with respect, and for me, there is a distinction there. i would say that D is correct, because it states that ethiopians are "the offspring of god" which emphasizes that they, alongside others, are children of god.
i don't know if you're allowed to pick multiple answers here or what, because i believe B and C are equally incorrect.
The answer is:
- D. strengthened, or reaffirmed, her religious faith.
<em>"I love thee with a love I seemed to lose </em>
<em>With my lost saints. I love thee with the breath", </em>
the speaker refers to a lost love she once had for the saints and that now, it has returned.
Moreover:
<em>"I love thee with the passion put to use
</em>
<em>In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith",</em>
the speaker compares a child's faith, which is pure and innocent, with her faith or religious life to emphasize how the love she feels now can change everything.
- <u>Option A</u> can not be correct since the poem implies that she had faith as a child.
- <u>Option B</u> is not correct because her love has not been challenged by faith.
- There is no evidence in the poem for <u>Option C </u>to be accurate.