<span>1. I am definitely sure that the Holy Grail for Anakin Skywalker from Star Wars is to have the ultimate power. That’s why he chooses the Siths’ side. According to his words: "I will even learn to stop people from dying", he thinks that the power of the Siths’ lords will give him an ability to cheat death. The Emperor promised him to give Anakin this power.
2. In my view the Holy Grail for Merida from Pixar’s “Brave” is freedom. She is quite selfish and she doesn’t want to depend on her mother. She just wants to wander through the forests and do what she wants to do. Anyway she changes throughout the film. But I think that her dream is to be independent.
3. As far as I remember, the Holy Grail to Holden Caulfield from Catcher in the Rye is to find peace and a place to belong. But his Holy Grail is more metaphorical than actual. Unfortunately he doesn’t find a place to belong.
4. I think that the Holy Grail to Juliet from Shakespeare’s poem is obviously love. She wanted to bond with her love Romeo. She has many obstacles to build relationship with him but her goal is to find peace with him.
5. If my memory serves me well, the Holy Grail to Harry Potter from the Rowling’s seven-book series is to save the magical world. He was the main target of Voldemort and he was ready to prey his life to kill Voldemort if it will save people he loves. <span>
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A Gerund/ Gerund Phrase is a verb form that acts like a noun and ALWAYS ends in -ing. Hint: Replace the gerund with "this thing," or, "that thing" to test your answer.
A participle / participle phrase is a verb that functions in a sentence as an adjective. It described nouns and pronouns.
Present -> ends in -ing
Past -> ends in - ed
Irregular -> various endings
Infinitive / infinitive phrases is a verb form preceded by the word "to"
Don't confuse with the preposition "to"
Infinitive = to + verb
Preposition = to + noun or pronoun
sometimes the "to" is dropped.
I hope this helped. Of course, this is the 11th-grade versions of English. Also, if you have any other questions let me know :)
There is no nine hundred In it hundred place. p.s. the 3,000 is missing a zero.
Answer:
The aspect of languages contained in the sentence which speakers must avoid is <em>Incorrect Grammar.</em>
Explanation:
The sentence reads - "Fire<em><u> distinguishes</u></em> are generally colored red"
The correct sentence is - "Fire <em><u>extinguishers</u></em> are generally colored red"
Notice the error. The speaker says <em>distinguishers </em>instead of <em>extinguishers.</em>
The above is an example of grammatical error and must be avoided for sakes of clarity.
Cheers!