<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be "increased welfare payments," since many conservatives view this as a waste of money. </span></span>
Answer: Get up and look at his lovely face.
Explanation: Shakespeare refers to his first 126 sonnets to a young man who he seemed to love deeply. In this sonnet, he is speaking to the muse that generally inspires him, asking for its presence and wondering the whereabouts of it all this time. In line 9; "Rise, resty Muse; my love’s sweet face survey," he is specifically asking the muse to get up and look at his beloved's lovely face, to see If age has gotten to him, and to wish him fame and good.
The correct answer is
<span>the
first option. In the excerpt from the article "Vision, Voice and the Power
of Creation: An Author Speaks Out," by T. A. Barron says that the spirit
(anima) can be found in the voice of a character. It is explicitly states in
lines: “The ancients [people from ancient history] used anima, in fact, to
describe breath as well as soul. That is wholly appropriate, for in the breath—the
voice—of a character lies its essential spirit.”</span>
Answer: Gallant means
adjective. brave, spirited, noble-minded, or chivalrous: a gallant knight; a gallant rescue attempt. exceptionally polite and attentive to women; courtly. stately; grand: a gallant pageant.
Explanation:
It adds emphasis to the text.