<em>Answer: Interpreters work bidirectionally, going back and forth between two languages. Interpreters convert the message to the best of their ability. ... The goal is to have the listener understand the message as if it were heard directly from the original speaker</em>
Answer:
He eats food, doesn't he?
Explanation:
Tag questions are used to turn statements into questions. We use them to check the information we think may be true.
They are formed by using an auxiliary verb (e.g.<em> be or have</em>) and a subject pronoun (e.g. <em>I, we, they</em>). The auxiliary verb we will use in this sentence is <em>be</em>, and the pronoun we will use is <em>he, </em>because that is the subject of the original statement.
If the original statement is positive, the tag question is negative, and the other way around. Because the statement <em>He eats food</em> is positive, the tag question will be negative. That's how we will get the question:
<em>He eats food, doesn't he?</em>
Answer:
D. Teams of people worked to take out the bolts and put in the rivets.”
Sure I'm free atm so we can talk i guess