Answer:
Q1: To turn over a new leaf [Railways, 1995]
Answer: A) To change completely one’s course of action.
Q2: A fair crack of the whip
Answer: B) A good luck check
Q3: To talk one’s head off
Answer: D) Talk excessively
Q4: To wrangle over a donkey's shadow [SBI PO 1984]
Answer: B) To quarrel over trifles
This night you shall behold him at our feast;
Read o’er the volume of young Paris’ face
And find delight writ there with beauty’s pen;
Now read the adaptation of the speech.
Well, do you think you’ll like this guy, Paris? When you check him out at dinner, see if you think he’s handsome.
The intended audience for the adaptation is most likely a
business associate.
close friend.
college professor.
total stranger.
The tone of the adaptation is conversational with the use of simple words and interpretation. The words are easy to understand and contain terms that are usually used in a friendly conversation with close friends. Therefore the intended audience is most likely a close friend.
The intended audience for the adaptation is most likely a B. Close friend.
This refers to the persons that literature is directed at or targeted because they would most likely relate to the theme and concepts.
Hence, we can see that from the given adaptation, there is an informal mood and tone used which has simple words that are easy to understand and we can infer that he was writing to a close friend.
This is because the narration contains an interaction between two people where thespeakeradvises the other person to seeifshelikesParisat dinner and uses informal language to showtheircloseness.
Read more about intended audiences here:
#SPJ5
noun
verb
adverb
adjective
preposition
interjection
The part of speech that the word "mine" has in the sentence is "noun" so option A) is correct.
The word "mine" is a pronoun that functions as a replacement of a noun. In this case the pronoun "mine" is a substitute for a noun.
The rest of the parts of speech provided as options do not reflect the function of the pronoun "mine" in the sentence.
To sum up, the pronoun "mine" functions as noun in this sentence.
(Mine) in this sentence functions as a PRONOUN. A possessive pronoun.
But since pronoun isn't one of the options, I think we could also say that it functions as an adjective. Because Lilly is describing the toy as hers.