I believe his anger disappeared, as he too wanted to patch things up.
This has to do with Milton's Paradise Lost, where Eve ate from the Tree of Knowledge, and then made Adam do it as well, which caused them to fall from grace. She started apologizing to Adam, saying that it was in fact her own fault, and because they loved each other, he forgave her because he wanted to be with his wife again.
Answer:
Possibly because if something stained the wall, then it would not come off, would be hard to get off, or will not come off for a long time.
Weak, typically anything that is cited from wikipedia is seen as unreliable
Answer:
With officers in <em>the </em>(a)<em> </em>night, <em><u>he </u></em>(b)<em><u> </u></em>would march to <em><u>the canteen </u></em>(c)<em><u> </u></em><u><em>like a </em></u><em><u>guardsman. </u></em>(d)
(a) The article "the" is missing before the word night.
(b) "he" is the subject of this sentence. The subject is rather undefined, vague, and needs to be investigated for one to have a clearer understanding of what this snippet is all about.
(c) "the canteen": This is another mystery noun in the above sentence. It begs the question of location. It also raises the question of why the "he" would match off to a canteen in the night.
(d) "like a guardsman": This is a simile that electrocutes the imagination. In this sentence, the three words above, besides acting as a simile and imagery (both of which are literary tools), functions as an Adverbial Clause which serves to qualify the verb <u>march.</u>
Explanation:
The only instruction given in the question is to Annotate.
To annotate means to give more <em>meaning to, to explain, to interpret, or to make more meaningful.</em>
Please note that an adverbial clause is a dependent clause that while functioning as an adverb qualifies another adverb, a verb, or even an adjective.
By way of further annotation, it suffices to say (with respect to the Grammatical Person) that the sentence above is reported in the third person singular.
Cheers
<em />
Answer:
pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis is the longest word
it refers to a lung disease
mark as brainlist plzzzzzzz