C)the horses drawing the sun
Juliet is addressing the horses drawing the sun. She uses the words "gallop" and "steeds" to describe them. Also, in the background information provided, it says that Phoebus has a "horse-drawn chariot that travels across the sky each day." The sun is not a steed, nor it is plural. The same is true of Phoebus and Phoebus's chariot. Therefore, these options are all eliminated. The horses are the only possible answer.
Clue words showing that contrasts are being made in this paragraph include D. while and however. <span>The words while and however are meant to express comparisons that point out either differences or contrasts, but not similarities. These words are needed to balance the points that make two things be different from one another.</span>
allusion is a brief and indirect reference to a person, place, thing or idea of historical, cultural, literary or political significance. It does not describe in detail the person or thing to which it refers.
(i got this from google just to let you know)
hope this helped :) pls give branliest
The lines that describe
this puzzling ability in the speaker's beloved to control his reasoning
faculties are “Whence hast thou this becoming of things ill,/That in the very
refuse of thy deeds/There is such strength and warrantise of skill,/That, in my
mind, thy worst all best exceeds?”
<span>In Shakespeare’s 150th
sonnet the puzzling ability is described as the capacity to make bad things look
good in her and to perform the most worthless actions so skillfully that the
speaker thinks that her worst is better than anyone else’s best.</span>
The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "D. Collector." My brother, Randy, is a comic book collector. the appositive in the sentence is that of D. Collector<span>
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