Lady Capulet wants to make this marriage news look positive. She informs her daughter about the arrangement to alleviate the grief over Tybalt. She praises Juliet's father and her husband in a way that him being a "careful father". When Juliet refuses, her mother's behavior suddenly changes. The reader can observe sudden change in her character and it seems rather dark reaction. Lady Capulet's final words in this scene is "Do as thou wilt, for I have done with thee" meaning "Do what you wanna do because I'm done worrying about you"
B. 90
C. 30
D. 10
Answer:
what you mean by this..um
In this analogy, the relationship between the pair of words 'sure' and 'ambivalent' is similar to the relationship between the words 'permanent' and 'temporary', as both pairs consist of antonyms.
The question you're asking is a form of analogical reasoning question, a type of question commonly seen in English and standardized tests, including the SAT. In the analogy 'sure is to ambivalent as permanent is to ?', the word 'sure' is on one end of the continuum and 'ambivalent' is on the other end. If 'sure' is the antonym of 'ambivalent', we then have to think of 'permanent' in a similar way, and find its opposite. Since 'permanent' means something lasting or unchanging, then its antonym would be 'temporary', something not lasting or subject to change.
So, 'sure' is to 'ambivalent' as 'permanent' is to 'temporary'.
#SPJ3
Answer:
TRUE
Explanation:
The first one, I’m not sure about but I thin kit's false, but the second one is false, I say this because the definition is (a literary or other imaginative work teaching a moral lesson)
boyous
boysome
boyful
boyish