Answer:
c. Kit and Helen decided to remain in the small town and open a coffee shop.
Explanation:
Antonyms are the words that have the opposite meaning to the specified word. So, any antonym of the word "migrate" will be the words that suggests or show any stability or immobility.
The definition of the word "migrate" in the dictionary is a movement from one place to another. This mobility of an individual or a thing is suggestive of the very act of movement.
Contrary to the definition, the sentence (c) does not show any suggestion of movement. Rather, it uses the word opposite to that of an act of movement.
Thus, the sentence that contains another antonym for "migrate" is sentence c.
Prepositions show location, direction and time. They are words that are being used to link phrases, nouns and pronouns in a sentence. They are placed before the phrase that is to be linked. Examples are at, to, in, on, from and the like.
Answer:
Correct answer is "E" march.
Explanation:
Old Ironsides was the nickname of a famous United States battleship from the USS Constitution, that in 1812 was fighting in the War. Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr created this work to protest the facts that the ship would be commissioned. The poem helped to ensure the ship would stay decommissioned, and it is still today.
Yeats states that he was not closely acquainted with the people in the Easter Rising. He acknowledges that he only exchanged pleasantries with them before the uprising. He also indicates that he has personal reasons for disliking one person. So he is writing about the cause for which they stood, which, by inference, is important.
The comparison of the rebels to "stone" suggests that Yeats may have viewed the rebels' attitude as inflexible or not adapted to the changing times. Yeats also acknowledges the possibility that their deaths may have been "needless" because the British might keep their promises.
However, his reference to the "sacrifice" (of all who had supported Irish independence) and the rebels' "excess of love" suggest that he views their cause in a positive light. Moreover, Yeats's repeated description of the kind of change that the uprising has brought about as "a terrible beauty" suggests that his sympathies lie with the rebels.
To summarize, Yeats places a certain distance between the rebels and himself, but he supports the rebels' cause.