A group of friends talk about their would be reactions under different circumstances with the conditional or the imperfect subjunctive of the verbs in parentheses.
Jonah: If I were to fall from a cliff, I would make sure to carry a parachute with me.
Nick: In case, it does not rain tomorrow, I would love to take you to the cliff.
Sona: If I were at your place Jonah, I would never even consider to go near to any cliff as I am afraid of heights, you know.
The Imperfect Subjunctive expresses "the same subjunctivity as the Present Subjunctive but in the Past". It is not a tense. It adheres to the same guidelines but makes reference to prior knowledge, unexpected occurrences, or potential outcomes.
To learn more about imperfect subjunctive here
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D. Activating Background knowledge
Answer:
I'm only having a guess here:
Two, empty, and several.
Explanation:
"Two"
describing how many bulldozers there are
"Empty"
describing the parking lot
"Several"
describing how many weeks the bulldozers have been in the parking lot for
The repetition of the word “whirl” creates a sense of "intensity".
"Oread", one of Hilda Doolittle’s best-known lyrics, which was first distributed in the issue of BLAST in 1914, serves to outline this early style well. The title Oread was included after the piece was first composed, to propose that a nymph was ordering up the ocean. Here is the short poem, (One of my favorites);
Whirl up, sea—
whirl your pointed pines,
splash your great pines
on our rocks,
hurl your green over us,
cover us with your pools of fir.