The correct answer is: [A]:
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" colloquial language " .
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Hope this helps!
Best wishes to you!
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A will be the anwser why? becuse <span>It has </span>not<span> been screened or verified by IMDb staff. ... Rex: [Points to a picture of a hulking, body builder woman on the wall] Last off, my students </span>will<span> learn about self respect. You think anybody thinks I'm a failure because I go home to </span>Starla<span> at night? ... </span>Starla<span>: [stops reading the 'Bust </span>Must' testimonial] I don't feel comfortable<span> ...</span>
Answer:
D.
Explanation:
'Bright City Lights Are Keeping Ocean Predators Awake and Hungry' is an article written by Damon Bolton. The article talks about the affects of street-lights offshore on sea life.
In his article, Bolton asserts that light pollution has affected the predatory cycle of marine ecosystem. He reported that lights in oceans make prey of seafloor communities more visible to predators such as yellowfin bream and leatherjackets. <u>The artificial lights make sessile invertebrate prey communities more exposed to fish predators during night than day-light, which hampers the marine ecosystem. </u>Thus option D is correct.
The rhyme scheme is ABAB up until the last two lines, which are CC. Rhyme scheme signifies which lines rhyme with each other, depending on the last word in each line. The As correspond with each other, the Bs correspond with each other, and so on.
The main idea of the poem is that one should not to give up pursuing a woman if at first she doesn't seem interested, because when she has finally been won over, her love will last forever. In other words, be patient, because a woman who is not easily wooed will provide the longest form of love.
The poet uses the "metaphor" of burning an oak. A metaphor is a comparison between two seemingly unlike things (in this case a woman/her love and an oak tree) without using the words "like" or "as" (which would make the comparison a simile).
The poet uses the metaphor of a wound to represent how deep love can go ("Deep is the wound, that dints the parts entire With chaste affects, that naught but death can sever").