What is written in bold is the subject, <em>what is written in italic is the predicate </em><u><em>and what is underlined is the object. </em></u>
Maria <em>is playing with her</em> <u>dolls</u>
He <em>is repairing his </em><u>laptop</u>
Ann <em>is driving her</em><u> car</u>
Arnold <em>is jumping the </em><u>fence</u>
Dad <em>is writing a</em><u> letter</u>.
The Subject in a sentence is the noun or the pronoun which performs and action, the action performed is the predicate in which we find the verb. The object is a noun or a pronoun which is acted upon by the subject.
Answer:
In lines 1-4, He uses summer to compare his lover with. Because it is hot, a time of passion, fun. Summer fades away, but his lover does not. Her beauty shines for eternity. Shakespeare uses the beauty in nature to communicate his insights about his beloved because to link him to this time of beauty, heat and passion.
It is simply a rhyme scheme. Every alternating line of the poem, the last words rhyme. That is the use of a rhyme scheme. I wouldn't say there is a 'which' to a rhyme scheme.
Sorry for wasting your time but I had to find a question that had both spots available. So that the other person can ACTUALLY answer.
I found this on a trip
Again sorry for time waste