What the verbs fit, set, and read have in common is that <span>they keep the same form no matter what tense is used.
</span>You can say - I read a book every day. Or Those pants fit you nicely. Or I set the table often.
And if you want to say all that in the past tense, it would look the same:
I read a book yesterday. Those pants fit him nicely a long time ago. I set the table two days ago.
I think it would be 'After drumming on his desk, Stewart was disciplined by Mrs. Hobson for distracting students from their exams.'
I believe it would (peaked/world class)
Answer:
sadness or misery
Explanation:
he's trying to convince whomever that letting him become his assistant will bring together something that can only bring good things. Like turning sadness and misery in their home to pure love