B. Match the following:
a) personnel - staff
b) reputed - prestigious
c) resume - a brief account of somebody's career
d) established - set up
e) recent - latest
Answer:
how would i know
Explanation: sorry but i need points
1. I'm afraid I can't make it tonight. I am seeing the estate agent at 7 o'clock.
2. The film starts at 7:30.
3. He has been trying to find a cleaning woman for a month now.
4. Look! You have spilt coffee all over my desk!
5. He has been reading the property section of the newspaper every day, but he still hasn't found anything.
Explanation:
Depending on if the sentence is using past, present, or future tense, you have to use the same tensed verb in order for it to make sense and be grammatically correct. For instance, #1 cannot be "see" because "see" is present tense and the sentence is using future tense because "I" will be seeing the estate agent at 7 o'clock; I am not currently seeing him. Thus apply it the same way to the other questions to get the other answers.
More than 20 times and I'm sick of jt
Answer:
Studies have established that Tutankhamun died between the ages of 17 and 19, more or less as Carter and Derry had concluded, and was between 1.6 and 1.7 metres (5ft 2in and 5ft 6in) tall. Beyond this, however, very little is certain.
There has been a great deal of speculation about the various medical conditions that may have afflicted Tutankhamun during his lifetime, and to what extent these contributed to his death. Possibilities suggested over the years include general physical weakness, perhaps caused by in-breeding within the royal family (which almost certainly did occur); pectus carinatum, or pigeon chest; and even ‘Tutankhamun syndrome’, with symptoms such as breast development, sagging abdominal wall and flat feet.
Secondary evidence, such as the presence of walking sticks in the tomb, and Tutankhamun’s representation in the art of the times, has sparked further speculation. The debate has also been influenced by depictions of Akhenaten, who was often shown as being a grotesque, almost deformed figure. Yet, no one knows whether this was an attempt to capture the likeness of a king genuinely suffering from some kind of illness or a mere artistic convention.