Many of the seemingly innocuous details throughout “The Lottery” foreshadow the violent conclusion. In the second paragraph, children put stones in their pockets and make piles of stones in the town square, which seems like innocent play until the stones' true purpose becomes clear at the end of the story.
Answer:
The correct answers are:
b. The boy killed the spider with his shoe.
In order to make a positive statement, we should remove <em>did not</em> from the sentence, and put the verb <em>to kill</em> into Past Simple tense.
c. The angry mother asks her son: „Do you think you know better than your dad?
To make a direct speech, we should convert the verbs into an adequate tense, in this case, the Present Simple tense, and adjust all the pronouns to the context.
d. Where has your father found you?
We should convert the subject of the passive sentence into the object of an active sentence.
e. We should forget these happy moments.
The past form of <em>shall </em>is <em>should</em>.
f. There won't be any trouble, will there?
In this sentence, we use the form <em>will </em>to emphasize the question we've made in the first part of the sentence.
Explanation:
The sentence you are looking for is ''<span>We
have petitioned; we have remonstrated; we have supplicated; we have
prostrated ourselves before the throne, and have implored its
interposition to arrest the tyrannical hands of the ministry and
Parliament''.</span>
Answer: Not sure what this means in naming 3 different situations without any instructions, but here it goes. Shopping, sleeping, and eating.
Explanation: