Answer:
1. I gave my mother a box of chocolates for her birthday. She was pleased.
2. Susan was sitting off in the corner without a care in the world.
3. When they were kids, they made homemade lemonade. They sold it for two bucks a pop.
4. Without support from the president, the bill failed to make it through Congress.
5. Construction continued unabated for more than two months. I wasn’t getting much sleep.
Hope this helps!
:)
Answer:
past – danced
present – dance
past perfect – have danced
past perfect – had danced
future – will dance
future perfect – will have danced
Explanation:
We form the Past Simple tense by adding <em>-ed</em> or by changing an irregular verb into its past form. e.g. danced
We form the Present Simple tense by using the root form of the verb or by adding <em>-s</em> or <em>-es</em> for the third person of singular. e.g. dance/dances
We form the Present Perfect from the present tense of the verb <em>to have</em> and the past participle of a verb. e.g. have danced
We form the Past Perfect form the past tense of the verb <em>to have</em> and the past participle of a verb. e.g. had danced
We form the Future tense by the form <em>will </em>and the root form of the verb.
e.g. will dance
We form the Future Perfect tense of the form <em>will have</em> and past participle.
e.g. will have danced
Answer:
The underlined prepositional phrase "to the front door" is used in the sentence as an adverbial phrase
Explanation:
The question is not complete since it does not provide the complete information, here is the complete question:
Read the sentence.
Hearing the key in the lock, the delighted dog dashed to the front door.
How is the underlined prepositional phrase used in the sentence?
A.as an adjectival phrase
B.as an adverbial phrase
C.as a noun phrase
D.as a verb phrase
An adverbial phrase is a group of words working as an adverb, it does not include a subject if this is the case it is no longer an adverbial phrase it becomes an adverbial clause, then "to the front door" is an adverbial phrase that is being used as an adverbial of place, one of the common structures of adverbial phrases start with the preposition as the example starts with "to".
The answer would be b grain of the fabric is like grain of the wood. if you look at a plank of wood you see the lines going up and down it same thing really