Answer:
Mark Twain. Chapter II. (Part of the book Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The). SATURDAY morning was come, and all the summer world was bright and fresh, and full of life. There was a song in every heart; and if the heart was young the music issued at the lips. There was cheer in every face and a spring in every step.
Answer:
The only option that is CORRECT according to the use of the Simple Present Tense is letter B. She cooks dinner once a week.
Explanation:
In English, the Simple Present Tense is used to express habitual actions or universal truths. The rules are quite simple:
- for most persons of speech, we do not alter the verb. We simply drop the "to" that indicates the verb is not conjugated, and add the subject before the verb: to cook - I cook; you cook; we cook; they cook.
- for the third person singular (he, she, it), the verbs will be slightly altered. Most verbs will have an -s added to their endings. Verbs ending in -s, -sh, -ch, -o, -x, or -z will have -es added to them. Verbs ending in a consonant followed by -y will drop the -y and have -ies added. Study the examples: she cooks; he goes; it flies.
Having those rules in mind, we can see that letter B is the only correct option. It conjugates the verb correctly, in accordance to the third person "she". Letters A and D present an incomplete form of the Present Continuous Tense, and Letter C conjugates the verb in the singular while subject is plural.
Boi what , gimme points tho so like
Ophelia's death could be understood - as Gertrude contents - as being an accident. According to this view, Ophelia's branch snapped and she drowned in the river below. According to this viewpoint, Ophelia's death is tragic because it was a meaningless accident; her life is lost not by her own design or in response to the events transpiring around her, but because of the whims of chance and accident. On the other hand, Ophelia's death can be understood as being a suicide: Ophelia died, then, due to being driven mad because of her unrequited love for Hamlet and society's unreasonable expectations for women and their behavior. This understanding of her death is tragic because it shows the extent to which Ophelia was wounded and oppressed.