You could rewrite it a multitude of differing ways, but I’ll resort to not changing or adding a single word.
I have a dog, its name is Labrador. He is black in color. He wags his tail and licks my face when he is happy. I tell him, “Come, Labrador!” Sometimes he screams at me, “Gwaau!” He loves going for walks and chasing a red ball. I take him to school sometimes. Once he sees a black cat he wants to chase it, but I don’t let him. He is mad at me. I don’t know, but I hope he isn’t. I love my dog very much because he always obeys me and follows me everywhere.
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To form the comparative degree of adverbs, you should add
C. More or less
I think
1. inflection
2. indicative
3. infinitive
4. affirmative
5. double negative
Answer:
Do you know we make cheese from milk?
Explanation:
The sentence in passive voice is: "Do you know cheese is made from milk."
The sentence, in the passive, is stating a fact, and the subject is implicit. If we write it in the active voice where we use "we" as a subject, the meaning and the context of the sentence changes, so we can also replace the subject with "industries" or "farmers" to make the sentences in the active and passive have a similar meaning, which is stating a fact.
When we write the sentence in the active the verb goes in the present tense, and there is no auxiliary verb. Besides, the subject is explicit at the beginning of the sentence before the verb. In passive voice, the direct object, which is cheese, moves to the subject's position, and the verb goes in past tense with the auxiliary in the present tense.