Answer:
b. have
Explanation:
A sentence is said to be grammatically correct if the subject and the verb in the sentence goes in tune with the number. In the above sentence, the subject 'guests' is plural in number, hence the verb used should be in plural number too. The verb in the sentence is 'have gone'. The main verb in the sentence is 'gone' and the auxiliary verb is 'have'.
Answer:
The author has used the mindset of the knight in the given passage, as it describes that he is faced with troubles and problems and he is struggling to carry on with expedition despite being battered and weary.
Explanation:
The Faerie Queene is a magnum opus of Edmund Spenser. It is an allegorical tale written based on six virtues, that Spenserr thought are important. Each tale is presented with the characterisation of a knight.
Each knight is in a quest for the Faerie Queene. The Faerie Queene is a depiction of the Queen Elizabeth in the poem, who was considered as a virtuous queen.
In the given quote, Spenser has tried to develop the character of the knight by showing the mindset of the knight. The knight is faced with troubles in the given passage and struggles with the thought to carry on the quest. The knight is, though, weary and battered.
B My love is like a red, red rose.
C The flames made darkness visible.
D The wind was awake and disturbed the lake.
Answer:
A. She is a rose without a thorn.
Explanation:
Metaphors are figures of speech that assert that one element (person, animal, thing, quality, event, nature) is similar to another element. They are alike similes, but while similes use words such as "like" or "as" to compare, metaphors do not.
Option A is an example of metaphor because it asserts that "she" is similar or equal to "a rose without a thorn", figuratively speaking.