Answer:
- "At the same cask of mariage I shall broach
"
- "Today there walks the holy friar himself
"
- "Sad was the knight"
Explanation:
Inverted sentences are those in which the order in which the predicate and the subject is presented in an inverted form to what is conventionally seen. That is, usually, the subject appears before the predicate, however, in the inverted sentences this order is changed and the predicate appears before the subject.
The above phrases, taken from "The wife of Baths" is an example of this. However, it is necessary that you understand what is predicate and subject.
Subject is the element of the sentence in which the verb is acting. In the case of the phrase "Today there walks the holy friar himself", the verb is "walks" and he refers to "holy friar", since it is holy friar who is walking. In this case, "holy friar" is the subject of the sentence.
The predicate refers to everything the subject is doing, in the case of the sentence above, the subject is walking in a location. This in the sentence is represented by "Today there walks," this being the predicate.
I listened to grandpa, mom talking to dad, giving dad advice and the baby banging his block, over and over on the ground.
C) Pitchers threw at his head.
This line "Pitchers through at his head." uses the incorrect "through". This "through" means to go in and out of something, like a doorway. I walked through the doorway into the other room. The sentence needs the "threw" that means to take an object with your hand and propel it to another location. Threw is the past tense of the word throw. It is an irregular past tense verb, so it doesn't follow the rule of adding /ed/ to create past tense.