Answer:
Bhusan: Hello, Bidya,<u> </u><u>how are you getting on with your job?</u>
Bidya : I'm used to it now.
Bhusan :<u> </u><u>What about that Arabian girt?</u> She speaks English, doesn't she ?
Bidya : <u>No, she doesn't </u>.We communicate through laughter.
Bhusan : <u>Isn't it tiring?</u>
Bidya : Yes, it is. <u>I'm exhansted at the end of each day.</u>
Bhusan : What do you do in the evenings ? <u>Just go home and relax </u>.And you ?
Bidya : No, I don't often go out with my friends.
The females with the biggest thighs are better lowkey
Answer:
not mature
Explanation:
like your immature if your doing the wrong thinks and acting dumb
day your 20 and doing things that's immature
Answer:
The correct answer is A.
Explanation:
It is important to state that the original opening scene from Hamlet does not contain the "stage directions" included in this excerpt ("Elsinore, a platform before the castle"); and what is more, there is no explicit allusion to a place before the action actually starts.
Having said that, the correct answer is A because Bernardo asks <em>"Who's there?</em>" and Fransisco returns <em>"Nay, answer me; stand, and unfold yourself"</em> (meaning, you tell me who you are and identify yourself). <u>This interaction can only be possible if it is very late at night, since the characters imply that they can's see each other by asking who is approaching.</u> Once they have identified themselves they talk about to things:
- "'Tis now struck twelve; get thee to bed, Fransisco"
="The clock says it's twelve, so go to bed" This is an explicit reference to the time in which this scene takes place, so now we can be certain that it is very late at night.
2. "it's bitter cold, and I am sick at heart"
= "It's very cold and I feel depressed" This is an explicit reference to the weather being cold.
Answer:
Based merely on "out of water," this is a prepositional phrase.
Explanation:
"Out" is an adverb (an adverb asks what, where, when) because out answers the question of what. "Of" is a preposition and "water" is the object of the preposition.