Answer:
Eli is walking the dog after he had finished his homework
Explanation:
Parallelism is a technique in grammar where there is a balance created in a sentence by using the same verb forms or word forms so that the words would have a parallel meaning and be easily read and understood.
Therefore, rewriting this sentence, "The dog is being walked by Eli after Eli had finished his homework" to make it parallel and using the active voice and perfect tense would give us Eli is walking the dog after he had finished his homework.
Answer:
The Nest:
By: Bill Baldwin
Because the sunshine moved through a blue sky it became very clear to see the nest in the tree. As Jane climbed the tree anxious to see if there was any eggs in the nest Johnny Jane's little brother decided to shake the tree to distrub Jane's attempt to reach the nest as she climbed. The higher Jane climbed the more anger billed in Johnny because her actions to clumb showed more success to her intensions..
So johnny seeing that he couldn't distract Jane from her attempt his attitude changed and he decided not to distract his siater but to see what she would find in the nest when she climbed down.
An emphasis on moral behavior (and the questioning of it) is at the core of "Romeo and Juliet". The main conflict revolves around it: how ethical it is to fall in love with my family's enemy? During the course of the drama, this moral question transforms into another one: How ethical it is to hate other people in the first place, based only on their surname?
The ethical question gets especially complicated when Juliet thinks about marrying Paris. To her, it seems as if she would betray Romeo, which she would never do; but the paradox is that if she betrayed Romeo, she would undo the betrayal of her family. In spite of that, she doesn't want to give up on her loyalty to Romeo. In Act 4, Scene 1, she says:
JULIET
O, bid me leap, rather than marry Paris,
From off the battlements of yonder tower,
Or walk in thievish ways, or bid me lurk
Where serpents are. Chain me with roaring bears;
Or shut me nightly in a charnel house,
O'ercovered quite with dead men's rattling bones,
With reeky shanks and yellow chapless skulls.
Or bid me go into a new-made grave
And hide me with a dead man in his shroud
<span>(Things that, to hear them told, have made me </span>
tremble),
And I will do it without fear or doubt,
<span>To live an unstained wife to my sweet love.</span>
The protagonist is Ronald Adams