The correct answer is D. When I sit alone and feel sorry for myself and my bad luck
Explanation:
In language, paraphrasing means to explain the meaning of an excerpt, speech, etc. using different words from the original ones. In the case of the first four lines of Sonnet 29, in these lines, the author expresses feelings related to sadness, disgrace, and depression. Indeed the author explains every time he is in disgrace "When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes" he cries and feels sorrow about it "I all alone beweep my outcast state" and also he regrets his bad fortune or luck "and curse my fate". According to this, these lines could be paraphrased as "When I sit alone and feel sorry for myself and my bad luck".
I am so sorry but what book does this question from? I hope you have time to edit it and say what book.
Sincerely,
MarshmellowSnowflake
Answer:
Elie Wiesel, Nobel Laureate, a Jewish, World War II holocaust survivor, who lost his family as a child in the holocaust and had fought tirelessly against injustice, in his Nobel peace prize acceptance speech on 1986 swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation.
Explanation:
I took the Test
Answer:
Option C: Prufrock feels isolated, even in the company of others.
Explanation:
That's the answer on apex.