I’m gonna have to say A. Details
Answer: A) Mercutio believes Romeo is too preoccupied with girls and romance to fight Tybalt.
Explanation: In the given excerpt from Act II, scene IV of "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare, we can see a conversation between Benvolio and Mercutio about Romeo and his chances if he decides to fight Tybalt. Benvolio thinks Romeo will answer Tybalt's challenge but Mercutio thinks Romeo is in love and too preoccupied with girls and romance to fight Tybalt, he says that in the lines "Alas poor Romeo! he is already dead; stabbed with a white wench's black eye; shot through the ear with a love-song; the very pin of his heart cleft with the blind bow-boy's butt-shaft: and is he a man to encounter Tybalt?"
Answer:
1)fairy god mother told Cinderella not to cry
2)she told that she don't have a gown to wear for the party
3)The handsome prince requested me to dance with him
4)The prince said that he will find her
5)The prince told her to try on slippers
Answer: Main characters: Star, Khalil, Maverick , Lisa, and Star’s brother. Minor characters: Chris , Uncle Carlos, and Hailey.
Explanation:
Answer:
The bushes are dancing because:
4. The birds are hopping around in the branches.
Explanation:
The passage we are analyzing here clearly states that it is because of the birds that the bushes seem to be dancing:
<em>[...] and the bushes fairly danced with birds.</em>
<em>[...] as the small gray birds hopped on the swaying branches.</em>
The birds are hopping, stretching their wings, puffing out their chests, all the while making the bushes' branches sway. Why does the author use the word "dancing" to describe the movement of the branches, then? This is a technique called personification. Bushes cannot dance but, by saying so, the author conveys the idea that the way the bushes are moving is beautiful, rhythmic, hypnotizing, just like dancing.