Answer: B) The rhyming words "fate" and "hate" connect the pilot's fate to his emotions.
Explanation: In the given excerpt from "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" by William Butler Yeats we can see the rhyme pattern ABAB (the words from the lines 1 and 3: "fate" and "hate" rhyme, as well as the words "above" and "love" from the lines 2 and 4). The rhyming of the words "fate" and "hate" connect the pilot's fate to his emotions, so the correct answer is the corresponding to option B.
The galloping horse scared the child.
In this sentence, the word GALLOPING is
1. Present participle
In the given sentence, it is used as an adjective.
<span>When viewed through a formalist lens, the point of Shakespeare’s structure is to emphasize Hamlet's indecision that recurs throughout the play.
Hamlet is quite an indecisive character - he knows that he should do something, but he is torn between his options. He knows that he cannot choose to stay idle and ignore the death of his father - thus he can either choose revenge and kill Claudius, or choose suicide, and end it all.
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This part of the excerpt seems to be correct as it reveals that the diet alone is responsible for his ninth birthday: "It had plenty of room to expand, thanks to the spare diet of the establishment; and perhaps to this circumstance may be attributed his having any ninth birth-day at all."