Answer:
a tale of 2 kitties, you mean.
OH WAIT WRONG BOOK
Explanation:
Answer:
She was up to her chin in salt-water.
B. You can be used as both. Here is an example. "You said you wanted this bear, so I got it for you." You is used as both a subject and object pronoun.
Miss Havisham commands Pip and Joe to meet with her in order to sign over Pip as an apprentice to Joe. From the time Pip is young, Miss Havisham invites him to her house to watch him play with Estella. His sister allows it because she hopes that being connected with the Havisham's will elevate Pip in some way.
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The correct answer is <u><em>C, "Mark studied for his math test with Margie"</em></u>
Explanation: The past tense is used when you want to talk about an event that had already happened in the past. That being said, an conjugation of the verb STUDY is the following:
- I study: Present
- <u><em>I studied: Past simple</em></u>
- I will study: Future
There we can see that the past of the verb Study is studied and for that reason, the only option that has it correctly is C.