Answer:
Rick: How <u>are</u> you and Marcia celebrate New Year's Eve, Tim?
<u>Will</u> you <u>both</u> go to any parties?
Tim No. We <u>will</u> go out for dinner. Our favorite restaurant
<u>will </u>serve a special meal, and our friends <u>would</u>
Join us there. But we <u>wont</u> stay out late.
Rick: So you <u>will</u> be home before midnight, huh?
Tim: That's right. It <u>would</u> be a quiet celebration.
Explanation:
Answer:
According to Line 1 and Line 10 of the poem, it can be inferred that Icarus is better off testing his limits, a feat he must embark on in order to discover his abilities instead of wondering somewhere years later what would have been.
- The first opens with a question asking to know what else the boy could have done
- in the tenth and opening of the eleventh line, he alludes that the boy flew exactly to the point of wisdom;
- Following through on that, the remainder of the eleventh and twelfth line rejects the notion of living in ignorance of ones capabilities and possibilities;
- The confirmation that Icarus now knew his strengths, weaknesses and capabilities is easily rested with the eighteenth line.
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Cheers!
D. because it said between a blurred sagacity which means unleaded judgment.
It is C:3 because it is the Boeing straight.<span />