Answer:
1. He will be riding ...
2. Are you visiting ...
3. He has been earning ...
4. I didn't allow ....
5. We didn't (want to) ensure that there would be ....
6. He will not have passed ...
7. I will be leaving ....
8. <u><em> >> They verb is missing. <<</em></u>
9. He will have just returned ....
10. He will be doing .....
Explanation:
This question is missing the options. I've found the complete question online. The options are as follows:
[...] Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson have been together for 23 years, as have Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick. Denzel and Pauletta Washington have been married for 28 years, Billy and Janice Crystal for 41 years, and Bill and Camille Cosby for 47 years.
A. brief examples
B. synthetic examples
C. repetitive examples
D. enumerated examples
E. informative examples
Answer:
The kind of supporting materials being used in the excerpt is:
A. brief examples
.
Explanation:
<u>The purpose of using brief examples is to simply further illustrate or demonstrate something to the audience that they may not know, that is not so obvious to them. That is precisely what we have in the excerpt we are analyzing here. The speaker merely wishes to show his/her audience that there are several couples in Hollywood who have been married for quite some time. There is no need to used, for instance, an extended example here. What has been said so far is not so complex as to demand a lengthy example</u>. Notice that the speaker is not necessarily enumerating the couples, nor is he/she providing two much information about them. Their names and how long they've been married are briefly stated, which is enough for the purpose of illustrating the affirmation that "Not all Hollywood marriages are doomed to quick failure."
Answer: don’t ask me go to their website
Explanation:
Answer:
penury (Chapter 1)
emaciated (Chapter 4)
adduced (Chapter 8)
Explanation:
I've chosen the three words above from the novel "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley. After looking them up in a dictionary, I was able to define them as the following:
penury - oppressive lack of resources; extreme poverty.
emaciated - thin and weak due to lack of food or due to illness.
adduced - past form of adduce - to give reasons as to why you believe something to be true.
Now, let's write sentences with the same context as given in the text of the novel:
Original: [...] while the number of half-clothed children gathered about it spoke of penury in its worst shape.
New sentence: The penury that desolates the country is clearly noted in children's bare feet and bloated stomachs.
Original: My cheek had grown pale with study, and my person had become emaciated with confinement.
New sentence: Her once glowing skin was now emaciated after a whole month in the hospital.
Original: [...] and as her confusion had before been adduced as a proof of her guilt, she worked up her mind to an appearance of courage.
New sentence: My tears were adduced as proof of my feelings for the deceased young man, even though I denied knowing him at all.