Answer:
3. Would you like a sandwich? "No thanks, I have <u>just</u> had lunch.
4. Shall I pay the waiter? "No, I have <u>already</u> paid him."
5. We have known each other <u>for</u> ten years.
6. Rayan hasn't texted me since Sunday morning.
7. ...you <u>ate</u> breakfast.
8. The train...<u>arrived</u>.
Explanation:
For the rest it is mainly just the past tense of the word.
For example:
He (eat) breakfast.
He <u>ate</u> breakfast.
Answer:
The Tell-Tale Heart
Explanation:
"The Tell-Tale Heart" is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe. It was about some detectives capturing a man who admits to the killing of an old man with a strange eye. The murder is carefully planned, and the killer killed the old man's by pulling his bed on top of the man and hiding the body under the floor.
I read this story on 7th grade, the things they taught me were terrifying.
Answer:
B. a heading that indicates the text’s purpose
Explanation:
Just took the quiz!!
In the excerpt, the word "pungent" refers to the pickles' aroma.
Pungent is a word to describe a very strong smell, very sharp and biting. So when Untermeyer used the word pungent to refer to the pickles, he was talking about their aroma, which is a fancy way to say smell.
He enjoyed it more than he did when he read it a long time ago. ... The adults in Romeo and Juliet were also just as rash as the children. But not even adults are perfect.