Love is that one thing that you can't really get enough of but at the same time you can also feel like it's too much. Usually when people think of love they think of a good marriage, but I think of it as basically anything. For example, you can love your job, school, friends, animals, and the list goes on. The most basic thing to loving something/someone is putting effort into whatever it is because if you put effort into it, I can garuntee you that you will be much happier with the outcome. So, the next time you want to love someone/something, make sure to put forth the effort into it.
Customer Who Obtains A Loan From A Bank In Turn Becomes A Borrower
"where the game was being played."
Describes Cleveland - a noun.
The clause describes a noun thus it is adjectival.
In Emily Dickinson's 'Hunger' the word itself along with the word food serves as a host of metaphors.
Explanation:
<u>The poem is in 5 stanzas and the 4th stanza represents a turnaround in the narrative of the poem. </u>
It starts with the availability of food that the narrator has never felt before and as they draw the food near they describe the hunger they have faced till then.
In the fourth stanza the rhythm changes as now the narrator starts narrating how being in plenty has also hurt them. That<u> having aplenty is as bad as having none</u> is the running theme that becomes clear here.
Answer:
it's a compound subject
Explanation:
got that answer from edgenuity