The Circuit is told from Panchito’s point of view.
B.Panchito’s
I absolutely love Shakespeare so i know for a fact the answer is d with no doubt about it.
Hello!
I believe this sentence uses A. Passive Voice.
I think this because in a sentence using passive voice, the subject is acted upon by the verb. This sentence is an example of that.
In "Lines Composed a Few Miles About Tintern Abbey (1798), Wordsworth evaluates his relationship with nature and the memories he had, contrasting how this relationship was in the past and how it is now.
In line 36 he mentions another gift that comes with age. This marks the passing of time and how he has matured. When he was a young boy, nature and the psysichal and material joy of it made all his world. The mountains, rivers and streams marked his passions and love. Now an old man, even if he cannot resume that relationship, he does not mourn because with age he has acquired a different relationship, more sublime in a spiritual way. He can now hear oftentimes "The still, sad music of humanity" and guard the heart of his moral being.
Answer: In the past few days you may well have scribbled out a shopping list on the back of an envelope or stuck a Post-it on your desk. Perhaps you added a comment to your child’s report book or made a few quick notes during a meeting. But when did you last draft a long text by hand? How long ago did you write your last “proper” letter, using a pen and a sheet of writing paper? Are you among the increasing number of people, at work, who are switching completely from writing to typing?
No one can say precisely how much handwriting has declined, but in June a British survey of 2,000 people gave some idea of the extent of the damage. According to the study, commissioned by Docmail, a printing and mailing company, one in three respondents had not written anything by hand in the previous six months. On average they had not put pen to paper in the previous 41 days. People undoubtedly write more than they suppose, but one thing is certain: with information technology we can write so fast that handwritten copy is fast disappearing in the workplace.
In the United States they have already made allowance for this state of affairs. Given that email and texting have replaced snail mail, and that students take notes on their laptops, “cursive” writing – in which the pen is not raised between each character – has been dropped from the Common Core Curriculum Standards, shared by all states. Since 2013 American children have been required to learn how to use a keyboard and write in print. But they will no longer need to worry about the up and down strokes involved in “joined-up” writing, less still the ornamental loops on capitals.
Explanation: