Answer:
1.The large house has been built by the browns.
2.She was stung by a jellyfish while she was swimming.
3.she was given a nice present.
4.the new song ia being sung by jane.
5.The house was destroyed by the storm
6.A lot of money was spent on the first ahooping Saturday.
7.How is that word written.
8.The flowers were watered every day.
9.His parents were called to the office by the headmaster.
10.the show will be directed by ben.
11.the window pane has been broken by the dog
12.The bill must be paid first.
13.She was being interviewed for the job.
14.He was told not to talk in class by the professor.
15.Your neighbor shouldn't be spoken too.
TRUST ME!!
I don't really know sorry
Answer:
1: The coach was admonishing them, bringing up each of their deficiencies.
2: The birds were iridescent, yet they had a strong dissonance.
3: The little boy was malicious and threw the snowball at the lady, who became transfixed.
I'm not sure how good these are, but I hope it helps some. These are just examples.
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
From Caramelo, by Sandra Cisneros
"A bungalow, a duplex, a brownstone, an apartment. Something, anything, because the Grandmother’s gloominess was the contagious kind, infecting every member of the household as fiercely as the bubonic plague".
The figurative language in lines 5 through 7 establishes a tone of
1) loneliness
2)confusion
3)desperation
4)shame
Answer: 3)desperation
Explanation:
The description of the grandmother´s bad mood like something contagious as a plague shows the desperation the character feels in that situation. The grandmother being unhappy and therefore mean to those who live with her, pushes the narrator and everyone in that family to desperately find somewhere else for her to live.
I perhaps view politics a bit in reverse from most people. I see it as an expression of society and the state of a culture. Not only are politics ubiquitous but one can only understand them when they see them in every day life.
<span>It's like a river. If you want to study a how a river flows, you can't scoop some water up. You have to understand several factors to why a river flows. Trying to isolate it will never reveal even that simple thing to you. If you really want to understand politics, study psychology and sociology. Study military history and especially study mass movements. </span>
<span>Only studying the specific occurrences is really just a matter of memorization, you won't ever understand politics until you realize that it being ubiquitous is a fundamental principle of politics. Don't get caught up on looking at one puzzle piece that you never realize where to put it.</span>