A jewel
Claudio says, "Can the world buy such a jewel?"
Sonnet 18 is an expression of love. It describes the person he is speaking of as beautiful, sweet, and temperate. Sonnet 130 takes the opposite approach by describing how she is not as beautiful as nature.
"Sonnet 130" satirizes the ideals of beauty of Shakespeare's time. Instead of saying that his mistress is as beautiful as a flower, a summer's day, etc., he details all of the ways in which she fails to compare to anything of that nature and in fact is not attractive at all.
Nothing, but she agrees with the nurse that his face is better than any man's, his leg exceeds all men's, and his hand and foot and body are past compare. This is in Act 2 Scene 5.
Claudio Monteverdi
Claudio says, "Can the world buy such a jewel?"
Claudio says, "Can the world buy such a jewel?"
There is nothing to compare. Chloroplast is doing the photosynthesis.
measure their amplitudes
nothing
No because its not a compare or contrast
Well, young mistress. You can compare golf and hockey. The are nothing alike A-MEN!
Experiment controlled
nothing
NOTHING -you cannot compare a LENGTH to a VOLUME
nothing is it has to have two number to compare .
There is nothing called conpare but there is compare. Compare is to consider or describe as similar, equal, or analogous; liken.